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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-10-05 - Orange Coast PilotCounty campgrounds
last stop for many
who need shelter
<See below>
ORANGE COAST
!\JI ,. N l I\ r ·J ' 'h t · , ·
"' Johnny Carson
rapped
Britain · TV debut
• ID
<See below)
••••••
YOUR HOMETOWN DAILY PAPER
Who gets missing wo1nan's $20
By The Associated Press
A Los Angeles County official
and an attorney have squared
off in a court fight over who will
administer the $20·million estate
of missing millionaire Thelma
Jeanette Gaston.
Mrs. Gaston. 80, disappeared
from her Rancho Park residence
June 28, leaving a note on her
front door saying she was look·
ing for her cat. soon afterwards,
someone began trying to sell her
property and cash checks from
her bank accounts . Forged let·
lers over Mrs . Gaston 's
signature said she was running
away lo have some fun .
A 39-year·old carpet salesman
from Newport Beach who had
befriended the widow was ar·
res ted Sept. 2 o n various
charges connected with the case
as be tried 'to re-enter the U.S.
from Mexico.
Gordon Treharne, the Los
Angeles Cou nty public ad-
ministrator and public guardian,
filed a petition in Superior Court
last week seeking ~ontrol of the
estate. In late August, at the re-
quest of police officers in·
vestigating Mrs . Gaston's disap-
pearance, Treharne sought and
received temporary authority to
OeltY ............ "'c:a.w SW-,
County campgrounds are the last stop for Carol and Brad Ammons after evictwn /rom apartment in
Fullerton
County -homeless turn to parks
Temporary shelters, food, a scarcity
By JODI CADENHEAD
Ot -Delly ...... Su" Carol Ammons lifted the pie<:e
or blue tarp that serves as a
home Cor her and her husband.
Luckily lhe pounding rain had
missed their flimsy mattress by
a rew inches.
T h e couple moved into
Featherly Park, on the outskirts
or Orange County, several days
ago after being evicted from
their Fullerton apartment for
failing to pay rent.
As Brad, 23, and Carol, 21, tell
it, they refused to pay rent
because the ir stove and
refrigerator had not worked for
more than a month. Then their
ladnlord padlocked their apart·
ment and will not return their
belongings until they pay the
back rent, they said.
Broke. the couple went looking
for a temporary roof lo put over
their heads and found what
many others in Orange County
have found
All the churches they called
had nothin~ available. A worker
at the Salvation Army said they
were fuU and suggested the cou-
BRANGI COAST WIATHIR
Low clouds late tonight
and early Tuesday morn·
ing, otherwise fair. Lows
tonight 58 along the coast.
64 inland. Coastal high
Tuesday in low 70s. inland
near 80.
111101 TODAY
Sportawriten John Sevano
and Curt Seeden tell wh11 <U
~u <U how the Rama ~at
the BtDl.IJM. See atoriea, POfle
CI.
11111
,~., .... ~ =
Ii
pie try the alley behind the
shelter lf she had been willing
lo lie. Carol said she could have
found a bed at a shelter for bat·
lered women.
With no place else to tum, lhe
c ouple d rove their beat-up
Chevrolet through the pictur·
esque campgrounds and draped
a piece of borrowed tarp over a
,couple of sticks of wood. Park
rules make it impossible to s tay
more than 14 days at a time,
they say.
To add to their problems,
Brad lost his job a couple of
days after arriving at Featherly
when he couldn't get to work on
time. "This is all we own," said
Carol. gesturing toward two
clean plates, an assortment of
silverware, a can of s pray de·
odorant and a smatlle of af.
tershave spread across a picnic
table.
When the 14 days are up
they'll merely pack up and slay
overnight in their car
somewhere else and then return,
they said.
Featherly Park and other
campgrounds in the county are
the last des perate stop Cor peo-
ple down and out with no place
else to go.
Jean Forbath, executive direc·
tor of Share Our Selves (SOS) in
Costa Mesa, s aid she often rec-
ommends the park to the many
families who come looking for
help from the nonprofit or·
ganization.
For one thing, it's only S5 a
night. And it does have showers
and cooking facilities, added Ms.
<SeeTEMPORARY ,PageA2l
Britons rap Carson
England debut turns sour
LONDON <AP> -British
television critics were not
amused by Johnny Carson's
weekend debut on England's
commercial network.
'·I was eager to see what
made a man worth $3 million a
year," Dennis Hackett wrote ln
the Times of London. "Whatever
it was, it was not s howing,
though he obviously is tremen·
dously satisfied with himself. It
is not even as ir we could blame
this production on damage suf·
fered by being bounced otr a
satelUte."
I ndep·e ndent Te l e v ision
launched a 13·week ser ies or
once·a·week Carson broadcasts
on four ot its 13 stations Satur-
day evening with a tape of bis
19th anniversary s how.
Herbert .Kretamer of the Uauy
Mail reckoned Canon Jo.at the
opening bout wtt.b Brilain'1 top-
rated talk·sho" boat, Michael
Parkinson, whose pro1ram ran
earlier In the evenln1 on the
British Broadcaatirtc Corp.
network.
"Carson Is the arcbety.I ,.
American, catering for an au·
dience that is terrified of even
momentary boredo m ,"
Kretzmer wrote.
Nancy Bank-Smith, tilting her
r e v I e w I n t h e c· u a rd i an
.. ~erCorming Monkeys," said
she was more impressed with
Carson 's sidekick, Ed
McMahon, than wilh the silver-
haired star.
'"He (McMahon) has been do-
ing nothing in particular on the
Johnny Carson show for 19 years
and Carson appreciates it," she
noted.
·'The idea that Ed should ac·
tually do something, such as re-
move a piece or chicken from a
small but contentious puppy, la
treated by the audience as a
great joke."
The London station that car-
ried the show repe>rted it got
"more t han 50 calls" from
viewers complaln1n1 about the
program. •
!Jut a 1pokeaman estimated
"millions" watched the abow.
Off6ctal raUnp •on't be known
untH later th!• week, tbe 1t.atioa
said. •
administer the estate.
Hi s bid for a more )~sting
stewardship is being challenged
by John Mittrick, a Hemet al·
torney who says in his petition
that Mrs Gas ton named him ex·
ecutor of her property and left
a bout half her estate to his two
daughters in a handwritten. un·
witnessed will dated July 1980.
Mitlrick says his briefcase con·
taining the original copy or the
will was stolen while he was
bringing the will in to show
county officials.
'"Doesn't it look a little bad?
Sure, that's been going through
my mind . . ," he s ays. ''But
I'd take a r .ygraph or anything
on this t ... ng if it were admissi·
ble as .ridence."
M 1ttrick s aid he had four
copies of the will in the brief·
case. but no other copies
Another copy was found in Mrs.
Gaston's locked desk. However,
the portions relating to Mittrick
had been crossed out in blue
ballpoint ink, Treharne's peti·
lion states.
Mitlrick said he believes the
alterations were made by Larry
Re m sen, who befriended the·
widow. He was arrested Sept. 2
as he tried to re-enter the U.S.
<SeeESTATE,P ageA2)
B-1, MX less risky?
Reagan plan said safer than Carter's
WASHINGTON t AP l -
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger told Congress today
that President Reagan's plan lo
deploy MX missiles in
strengthened silos and build a
new bomber is "a far less risky
course" than the strategies ad-
vocated by the Carter ad·
ministration
·'The previous administration
was willing to live with the risks
of a n aging 8 ·52 force for the
1980s , and the uncertain
sc h edule and unproven
cap abilities o f an advanced
t echnology bomber for the
I
Long show
opens to
top reviews
NEW YORK <AP l -
"Nicholas N i ck l eby ,"
Rroadway·s mos t expensive
show al $100 a ticket, left much
or the openmg-night audjence
feeling it got its money's worth,
but had some critics questioning
wh e th e r th e 8 1 2 ·hour
performance was too much of a
good thing.
Many who saw the show Sun·
day including some who paid
$30 for standing room -said
they came away feeling
refreshed.
· · 1 never expected it to be so
exciting. You cheer for the hero
and you curse at the villain,"
sa id C harl e n e Brandt . or
Manhattan. "l haven't felt the
time . It's j ust gone by in a
flash."
"ll's absolutely incredjble. Al
ever y intermission , we were
amazed that we didn't notice the
passage of lime." said Joseph
DiCorcia, who said he flew in
especially to see the play from'
North Carolina where he teaches
at Duke University.
Asked whethe r the $100 was
well spent, and if he would sit
through another 8"2 hours to see
the play, DiCorcia r e plied.
"Absolutely."
The Shubert Theater was
filled to capacity, with 985 spec·
talors attending the $4.4 million
ex lra vaganza.
The s how was the Royal
Shakespeare Company's adapta·
tion of Cl\arles Dickens' tale or a
you n~ innocent In an ever·
changing world or good and evil
in early Victorian England .
(See$100, PageA2)
Reagan ,'best'
says Hinkley
NEW YORK (AP) -John W.
Hinckley Jr. says Ronald
Reagan ls "the best president
we've had this century," and
compares himself and actress
J odie Foster to "Romeo and
Juliet."
Hinckley, 26, accuaed of shoot·
ing Reagan and three othera
March 30, made lhe statement&
In separate letters to Time and N~wsweek .
Both magazines said Hlnck.ley
bad written to them aeveral
weeka ago offering to amwer
any 20 questionl ~he m11aatna
asked.
• ~I
1990s ," Weinberger sajd in an
opening s tatement to the Senate
Armed Services Committee.
Il e said the Reagan ad·
ministration chose to go ahead
with the B·l bomber as an in·
terim measure because it is "a
rar less risky course in a field
where margin for error is ex·
ceedingly small "
Weinberger said the decision
to build 100 MX missiles and
start deploying them in rein·
forced silos "is a program to
give us the strongest possible de·
terrent forces as qmckly as we
can get them and to contninue
o ur constant se arch for
something even better.
Sen. John Tower, R·Texas,
chairman of the Armed Services
Panel, who has said he endorses
parts of the program but op-
poses putting the MX missiles in
fixed silos, said he was "con-
ce rned that we can accom·
modate" financing all the ad·
ministration's programs.
Reagan wants to strengthen
vacant Titan missile silos for at
least 36 of the 100 MX missiles
and lo build 100 B· l bombers
while work continues on a plane
CSeeMX,PageA2)
Mesa woman held
in murder attempt
A 15·year-old Vietnamese im·
migrant is reported in critical
but stable condition in a hospital
this morning after boiling cook·
ing oil was poured over his face
and he was stabbed five limes,
Costa Mesa police reported.
Officers s aid Nghia Huu
Nguyen is being treated in UCI
Medical Center's burn unit
where he is s uffering third·
degree bums over 18 percent of
his body.
Police said they arrested
Nguyen's sister·in·law Tien My
Chu, 25, on sus picion of attempt·
ed murder at 4:22 a.m. today
after they were s ummoned to an
a partment at 1015 Mission
Drive. Costa Mesa.
Witnesses told police the hot
oil was dum ped over the youth
as he slept on a couch in the liv-
ing room
Officers said he was stabbed
five times in the chest and arms
with a steak knife.
The woman is being held in
Orange County Jail in lieu of
$250,000 bail.
........... _. 0
FISHING OR SAILING? -What appears to be • ftahinc pole
is the antenna or a radio which controls the maneuvers of
these model sailboats -the latest fad among the yachUns
crowd. See Page Bl.
t
' '
r:
•
• • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981
Iran gime executes
129 more 'opponents'
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
1l r a n r or m •ti I y declared
I clerayman All KhiAmenei presi
dent loday by a record 95 per-
~e n t of lhc vote as the fun·
tdamental111t Moslem regime an·
" :'11 nabbed
,( ~f o }llowing
~'.Valley figlu
I. Eleven members or oppC>Sing
~ youth gangs from Santa Ana
... have been arrested in Fountain
n,VaUey's Mile Square Park
h following a·melee involving iron
1 bars, baseball bats, knives and
b reported gun fire, police said.
r: Four adults and seven
juveniles were arrested by
().Fountain Valley police officers
t, Sunday afternoon and charged
... with possession or deadly
11 weapons with intent to commit
.. assault.
<': Police say no one was injured
.t· in the Tight, mainly because the
forces scattered when one sus-
'J peel reportedly fire several
, shots from a handgun.
r1 The battle took place at the
n-Orange County facility's parking
n lot on Euclid Street just north of
Warner Avenue at 5:30 p.m.
·• Patrol of the county park is
'· the responsibility of the Orange
. County Sheriff's department.
}. but deputies called police for as-
. ~istance, after being notified of
"'the disturbance by park p·,rangers, POiice said.
Fountain Valley police officers
,, arrived at the scene within one
" minute, while Sheriff's deputies
,.arrived about five minutes later,
!) police said.
The arrested adults are
.rSamuel Gomez. 18, Jose
~ Alfredo Joenez. 20, Michael Cliff
1 Soza. 18, and Jess Martinez, 19.
J All live in Santa Ana. The seven
: juveniles arrested were between
1 16 and 17. police said.
CJ! In recent negotiations. city of·
~ ficials asked county authorities
·<·for better patrol of the park,
whichohas been the scene of in-
creasing violence and crime in
recent months, according to
authorities.
City authorities claim it takes
too long for Sheriff's deputies to
respond Lo crime emergencies in
the park.
Assistant Sheriff RauJ Ramos
said today that "greater em·
phasis"' is put on patrolling the
opark during s ummer months
1. and on warm holidays and
·weekends
Fountain Valley Police said to-
" ~ay that they respond to any
emergencies in the park that are
),or a ··ure threatening nature ...
)•
:. Re fugees r escu e d
MANILA <AP> -The U.S.
nounced the executions of 129
more leftlst opponents.
The Interior Ministry pro-
claimed Khamenel winner of the
nation's third presidential ele<:-
tion in 21 months bv a landslide
AaMCletM~,_
.'JEW IRA.V CHIEF
Clergyman All
.
Location
aids quick
fire r escue
Two young women trapped by
a bedroom fire in their second
floor Huntington Beach apart-
ment early today were fortunate
their home was across the street
from a fire station , officials
said.
The women, Karen Whitworth
and Mi che ll e Triano, were
rescued when firefighters placed
a ladder to a second·story win·
dow. Huntington Beach Fire
Captain Roger Hosmer said.
Hosmer said the blaze was re·
ported at 5:32 a .m. at an apart-
ment building at 733 Lake St. He
said the fire originated in a
chair placed too close to a built-
in wall heater.
16,007,972 votes of 16,846,996
ballots cast.
The 42-year-old leader of the •
ruling Islamic Republican Party
faced three token opponents. All
four candidates were outspoken
toy a lists o f revolutionary
patriarch Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini.
The ministry's undersecretary
for ~lltical affairs, Mohammed-
Hussein Sdrouredclin, said in a
statement broadcast by Tehran
Radio that he sent Khamenei's
name to the 12-ma n Council of
Guardians for confirmation. The
council Is Iran's constitutional
watchdog body.
As Khamenei's triumph was
announced. Khomeini's heir ap-
parent, Ayatollah Hussein Mon-
la ieri, called on I ran 's 36
million people to abstain from
slaughtering sheep Thursday on
the Eid al-Adha Moslem feast.
Montaieri urged Moslems to
instead donate the cost of sheep
to the estimated 1.5 million Ira-
nian refugees from the warfront
with Iraq.
Moslems traditionally are re·
quired lo slaughter a sheep on
the fi rst day of the four-day
Adha feast, a lso known as
Kurban Bairam.
Meanwhile, t h e clergy.
dominated regime's crackdown
on opponents resulted in the fir-
ing squad executions of 129 gov-
ernment foes in 24 hours and a
warning to Iranian landlords
that they would be "prosecuted
severely'· and their property
confiscated if they rented to
"counter-revolutionaries," the
state-run media reported .
A s pokesman for Tehran's
Evin Prison told The Associated
Press in Beirut that 61 leftists
w e re e x ecut e d in Evin 's
courtyards and two were killed
elsewhere in the country at
dawn today on charges or street
violence and armed insurgency
against the Islamic republic.
The spokesman, who declined
to be identified in the telephone
interview, said all 63 of the dead
belonged to the lslamic·Marxist
Mujahedeen Khalq, the leading
underground opposition group,
and its junior partner, Paykar. a
Marx1st-Lemnistorganization.
The Teh ran n ewspaper
Kayhan earlier reported leftists,
mostly from the Muja ·
hedeen K.hal9 . were executed in several Iranian cities on Sun·
day. including 30 killed in the
central city of Isfahan.
The latest executions brought
to 1.195 the total of secular leftist
activists put to death since they
mounted a campaign of as-
sassinations and born bings
agai n st the govern ment
following Khomeini. s firing or
moderate ex-Presi d ent
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr on June
22 .
Airline ends
Avalon flights
DllNY ...... ""'9.., a....~
Family uxiits for some of 36 beds available daily at Salvation
Army shelter in Santa Ana
From Page A1
TEMPORARY HOUSING. • •
Forbath. Usually the volunteer
organization tries to offer a hotel
room, a couple of days of food,
or a rarely vacant bed in the
three bedroom Orange Coast Jn.
terfaith Shelter they helped open
at St. John the Divine Episcopal
Church six months ago.
Ms. Forbath pointed out that
27 families came to the SOS of-
fice one day last week looking
for groceries.
Since the temporary shelter
opened last March in Costa
Mesa it has never been empty.
About 60 adults and 20 children
have found a temporary home
there so far.
•'Talk to any agency in this
county, temporary shelter is a
c onstant need ,'· said Ms .
Forbath. "There are j ust so few
places to send people. They have
no place to go."
By 3 o'clock in the afternoon
the line or men, women and
children looking for a bed at the
Salvation Army's shelter at 818
E . 3rd St. in Santa Ana is about
70 deep, said business manager
Warren Johnson.
When the doors open at 5, the
36 beds will go on a first come·
first served basis. Many wiJI be
turned away . But s everal
nearby hotels have agreed to of·
fer rooms to families through an
agreement with the Salvation
Army, said Johnson.
Still, the need for more beds
and food has become a pressing
problem. especially since the
Rescue Mission was closed four
months ago, said Johnson.
county. There is no limit on the
stay, but then again -rarely is
there a vacancy.
"Right now I have five sleep-
ing on the floor," said director
Mi chael Elias, whose office re-
ceives about 800 calls a month
from families looking for a place
to stay.
"It's most certainly getting
worse," said Elias. "Six years
ago you could find them an inex-
pens ive hotel. Now you can
forget it."
Although he strongly recom-
mends Featherly Park during
the summer months, Elias does
not in winter. "I couldn't put a
family out there in the cold and
rain."
With precious little temporary
housing available in the county,
it m ay seem that there are no
answers. But that's not so. ac·
cording to Ms . Forbath.
Although zoning laws in many
cities make it illegal, families
and seniors are beginning to live
together in order to cut ex-
penses. said Ms. Forbath.
Two families who met at the
Interfaith shelter in Costa Mesa
recenUy decided to share hous-
ing said Ms. Forbath. In the.
future. that solution is going to!
be used by more and more peo-'
pie, she predicted.
•* * * How to reach
OC shelters
·Navy frigate Roark rescued 63
1' Vietnamese refugees from the
l..SOuth China Sea, the 7th Fleet
· infor mation office said today.
The captain said the blaze
blocked the hall and stairway,
forcing the women to take
refuge in a second bedroom.
'Last year the Salvation Army
d to ' • ue' served 18,000 meals. In the first ue lJ1l.(l,., ' eight months of this year alone
Anyone looking for emergency
s helter or wishing to make a
donation can contact the follow-
ing agencies:
Firefighters, responding
quickly from the station across
the street, rescued the women
through a window in the second
bedroom and quickly ex-
tin~uished the fire, he said.
Damage was estimated at
$3.000 to the building, $1,000 to
the contents.
Presley
case ready
LOS ANGELES CAP > -
Catalina Airlines has announced
that it will not res ume flights to
Avalon on Catalin a I sland
because its image has been
severely damaged by having its
operating permit suspended.
A company spokesman said
that despite a federal National
Transportation Safety Board
ruling that t he company could
resume its s mall helicopter
flights between San Pedro and
the island Nov. 10, those nights
will not resume.
30,350 meals have been served in
the Santa Ana cafeteria. In or ·
der to do this. the Salvation
Army has had to stop serving
seconds, said Johnson.
Generally speaking, a bed at
the Salvation Army is available
only three days. But the rule is
flexible and any family needing
extra assistance will be allowed
to stay longer. sa!d Johnson.
At the Christian Temporary
Housing in Orange the down and
out will find one of the few tem-
porary housing shelters in the
Share Our Selves, 545 19th St.,
Costa Mesa, 642·3451.
The Salvation Army, 818 E.
3rd St., Santa Ana. 546-7880.
Christian T emporary Housing,
704 N. Glassell, Orange, 771-2843.
Fire bomb explode d
WASHJNGTON CAP> -Police
and Army experts detonaled a
firebomb Sunday that apparent·
ly was intended for a high-
ranking South African emissary.
--.... _... ...
•
8100 ...
A lthou1h moat reviewers.
lauded the producers' undertak·
fng itnd the fine actJnc. aome
said the play contalned dull
passages.
"While the hi1h point.a of lhil
'Nicholas 'Nlck leby" are
Himalayan indeed," said Frank
Rich in The New Y•rk Tlmet,
"They are separated by dull
passages, which clog the produc-
tion's arteries."
•
Jay Sharbutt of The Associat-
ed Press wrote, ··Alas, the pro-
duction, which 1et1 off to· a rous!
ing start with fl)'ihg lnuffim and '
actors dashing down. the alales
... isn't always ehgrossiag.,~ '
particularly in the fint .act . . . •
Luckily, the dull pauages are-
few, the dramatic ."4 toudllng J..I
ones many." ·
But Douglas Watt in the Dally
News said such langui d mo·
me nta are probably "due as
much tO the ape.ctator't momen·
tary lapse or attention " in what
it termed "big, sweeping theater
of a kind you are unlikely to en·
counter more than once ln a
lifetime." Outside the theater , 45tb
Street looked like "Limou.slae
Row " with c h -a uffered
automobiles waiting for the
patrons t o leave th e
theater.
The $100 evening did not in-
clude the price of dinner, and
most of the viewers had re-
se rved seats at nearby
restaurants ahead or lime.
although there were a few who
brown·bagged it.
Local eateries that did not re-
quire reservations, posted algns
addressed to t he "Nicholas
Nickleby" viewer. promising to
•·serve you and get you back in a
Dickens."
The play is in New York for a
limited 14 ·week engagement
through J an. 3. T ickets Uft
been sold out through October.
From Page A1
:MX •••
with "stealth" equipment to foil
Soviet radar.
Sen. John Warner, R-Va.,
chairman of the subcommittee
on nuclear forces and a former
Navy secretary, said earlier
that he would press Weinberger
to justify the use of fixed silos
a nd explain "whether we can af-
ford two new bomber programs
at the same time.''
In interviews Sunday, Wein-
berger called the plan a "vaat
strengthening" of U.S. military
might, while hjs predecessor at
the Pentagon, Haro1' Brown,
dismissed it as "better thaa
nothing."
"Because of the failure ·to
keep s trategic f orces
modernized and becauae of the
length of time it takes to bring
new systems on, there will be a
period in the middle of this
decade when we will be vulnera-
ble and will have a period of
cons iderable danger.•' Wei•·
berger said on CBS' "Face the
Nation."
essential to start now with the
mode rnization and strengthen·
ing or these strategic forces." be
said
Brown, interviewed on the
ABC program "Jssu es and
Ans wers," s aid, "It's better
than nothing. . . . It will pro-
duce a greater symmetry
between the United Stales and :
the Soviets. That doesn 't make
me very comfortable. J don't
worry about a U.S. first strike,
because it isn't goine to happen.
I do worry about a Soviet ru-st.
strike."
Former President Carter
scrapped plans for the 8-1 and
advocated shuttling 200 MX mis·
sites among 2,400 shelters in the
We s t .
MEMPHIS (AP ) -The
pathologist who officiated at
Elvis Pres ley's autopsy is
among the witnesses expected to
testify in the Criminal Court
drug trial of the doctor charged
with overprescribing dangerous
drugs to the rock 'n' roll singer
and eight other people.
The Fede ral Aviation Ad-
ministration revoked Catalina's
air taxi cer tificate on an
emergency basis April 10 after
two helicopter crashes in three
months, and what the FAA said
were numerous safety viola-
tions. * K~ds sk~, ~oot
AP ....
REWARD CLIMBS Reward
money offered for the cap-
ture of the killers of
Ca lif ornia Hig h wa y
"Patrolman Johnny R .
Martinez (above> and
wounding of omcer James
E. Szabo swelled to $27 ,000
over the weekend. The of.
ricers were s hot Thursday in
Alhambra.
James F . Neal, a former
Wate rgate prosecutor heading
the defense team, said jury
selection couJd be completed to-
day in tbe trial of Dr. George
Nichopoulos.
The 53-year-old internal
medicine specialist is charged in
a 14-count indictment with over-
. prescribing dangerous drugs for
Presley and eight other patients.
The charges carry penalties of
two to 10 years in prison and a
fine of $20,000 on each count.
Presley died in 1977.
' "
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomes P Haley P~•llWr .net C"""' f •«uf1•• OOtt«
Robert N Weed ... _,
Thomas A Murph1ne
[ClolO<
Michael P Hervey -·"ii o ... c10<
l. Kay Schultz
0.-IOt "'<>oer.i.-
KenMlh N GOddard Jr
CK-0.-
Befnard .. hulman
ComtO' ...
ChtrlH H LOOS
~'c.tol A Moore ........ '**
'
Claullled Mfvertlalng 71411142-5&71
All other department• 642·4321
MAIN OFFICE
U O W•\I 8 .. ~I (O.I• MPM (A
M••I •oorH' Bo• IS.O '°''•Moe. (.A •>•·•
COllr"9M "" 0<""90 CO.\I P11Dll\ll•"9 (-• Ne ""•\ ,,~,..,, 11u,httt•on' .. o~tOf'•.t ,,, ..... , o' AO
.,,.,,,, .. "" "''' ,.., •r n r'll't• .. •• Of'nrtv1 "" A•ff\f)..,t _.,,,.. fl#'""'""~o• '-OL"ff•QM "'"""' r
flW Ot-( .. \I 0-.1, POol Woll\ WlllC.I\ "t-
Hu1 ,.,.., "'"°'' t\ PVbtr\.~ o, '".,.. 0tM9 (N\t lll~h..,f'l1"Q (.,...ny \9.,..,,.,,. t-d•'°""'' ,., .. CkltMrilfdWrid
Mo•n t•y tf\tl'\ut)~ r ttdt1v '0' C°"t• ~• NflWp(Wt
8••1 r, H"'1\lt~l\n 8 .. •<f\ '° O'if\h\1ft V'lf•V '''""" ~,·~~~,:'~<'\..~~~:.o~ A'>~~':,''Y~~, ~!1:;:;
O"'bh,Pt1~ Ot"I\' '' 41 UO W"\t .... , ~tt•~t f' 0 ftO•
t\a,G (o'•·• w.-u c 41hfotn1" •1'>•
VOL. 14, NO. 271
The FAA. which then pressed
for a stricter penally than the
seven·month suspension ordered
by an administrative law judge,
and upheld by the NTSB, has
.. permanently destroyed" the
company's image, said Vern
Benson, vice president of Paul
R. Briles Inc., the pardena-
based parent company of the
airline.
F-rom Page A 1
ESTATE. • •
from Mexico and charged with
grand theft and forgery, receiv·
ing stolen property and unlawful
!light to avoid prosecution.
Remsen had access to the
bouse. Mittrick says, and hu
made accusations against him to
the police .
Treharne meanwhile says he
doesn't believe ln the autbenticl·
ty of the July ~ wUl. He also
believes bis office can do a bet-
ter job of admini1terln1 the
estate. ma petJtion attaches two
other G1.11ton wUls, a format one
from 1982 that does not menUon
Mlttrick and another bandwrtt--
ten will from 1919 that Uat.s Mil·
trick as executor.
We have the
best selection
of children's
ski clothin9
and equipment
in Southern
California!!!
2500 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport leach
7 14-631-3280 .
..
Obe,,..ywr
Skyr
Roffe
Demetre
Meister
1st Teain
Book irks 'mo~alists'
Schweiker caught in furor, over sp·anking
WASHINGTON <AP> -
llcallh and Hurnan Services
Secretary Richard S. Schweiker
Is weighlnR a reply lo a Moral
M ajorily clergyman who says a
popular government manual on
child·rearing should be banned
bcc1&use il admonishes parents
no! to ispank their children.
Quoting from Scripture, the
Rev. Greg Dixon of the In-
dianapolis Baplist Temple said:
·'I think God knows more
about chlld·rearlnc than the
bureaucrats. We've let a whole
horde of juvenu~ criminals out
on the street. It's this whole
business of lettln1 them know
they're UttJe an1els.
"Christian theology tells us
that people are born bad, ttmy're
born sinners. There's only one
lhlne that can drl vc tttat out."
The object of Dixon's ire Is
"Your Child From One1to Six,"
on wblcb millions or American
Decline in scores
turning around?
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Educators say tougher stan·
dards, a change in students' at·
titudes and even the gradualiqn
of the lasl or the baby·boom
generation all may be working
together lo spark a turnaround
in the nation's high schools after
years of decline.
Th e latest sign was in the
College Board's announcement
last week that for the first time
since 1968, the Scholastic Ap-
titude Test scores or college-
bound high school seniors did
not decrease.
The nearly l million students
in the class of 1981 averaged 424
on the verbal SAT and 466 on
math, the same as the class of
1980. It is a long way from the
478 verbal and 502 math national
averages in 1963. when the long ,
steady decline beJ?;an.
"I have a hope bound up in
some very encouraging signs
around the country that there
will be gains in the SAT scores."
said Robert G. Cameron, ex-
ecutive director or research and
development for the Coll ege
Board in New York.
"There is a trend among stu-
dents to be more serious about
learning" and more willing to
submit themselves to adults'
judgment about what they
should study, Cameron said.
II. voluntary ques tionnaire
given to the nearly l million
seniors who take the test each
year found that in the past four
years. students have been laking
slightly more academic courses.
They now average more than
four academic courses per year.
compared lo less than four in
1977, and the extra course more
oCt e n was in math or the
physical sciences
Scoll Thomson , executive
director of the National Associa-
tion of Secondary School Prin-
c ipals. s aid, "There is more
focus on rigor in schools today
than a few years ago."
Thomson said relaxed course
requirements as well as changes
1n society h e l ped bring
about the drop in test scores.
and he believes stirrer require-
ments and changes in attitudes
on the part of parents and stu·
dents will help drive them up
again.
.. Parents seem lo be a litUe
more supportive and more
serious about school today. and
there seems lo be a little bit
less or a tendency to blame the
school for anything and every-
thing," he said.
"We're seeing a s hirt in mood
and priority on the part of stu-
dents and schools today. It's
bound Lo make a difference,"
said Thomson, adding more stu·
dents are taking traditional
courses in English and math in·
stead of s uch less-demanding
electives as theater or film .
The baby boom lasted from
1946 to 1964. and resulted in
le gions of new s tudents -
particularly minorities and
those from low·income families
heading for college.
A Univers ity of Mic higan
Psychology Professor. Robert
Zajonc, predicted several years
ago that the SAT scores would
start to turn up in 1981 or a year
or two later as the post-baby
boom generation began laking
the test
parent.I have relied for •uldance
on reartn1 their youn1.
The government has dlst.rlbul·
ed 12.5 m111lon copies of tbe oft.
nwised book since it first ap.
peared In 1918. lt Is provided
free on request by the depart·
ment's Office o f Hurnao
Development and by members
of Congress, and is sold by the
Government Prtntln1 Office for
$1.75 a copy.
Dixon particularly objected to
a passage in the book on dis·
cipline which says that "ln less
informed times" It was believed
that children were born with
badness in them that had to be
driven out
"Nowadays, we know that
children are born neither good
nor bad. How they turn out de·
pends on the strengths and the
weaknesses they inherit and how
they gel along with us and we
with them." the book says.
Last July, Dixon wrote to an
aide to ·Sen. Richard Lugar. R·
Ind., saying it would be "in the
senator's best interest·• to stop
sending his constituents copies
of the book. Dixon also suggest-
ed that Schweiker halt publica·
tion.
Harold Eidlin. a spokesman in
the Health and Human Services
office that distributes the book,
said Schweiker is still debating a
s uit a bl e respons e to Dixon,
whose letter to Lugar was
forwarded to the secretary's of·
fice.
Eidlin indic1ted that there
was no discussion or halting
publication or a book that he
said is "obviously popular and
meets a need.''
In his re.ply to the Moral Ma-
jority leader. Lugar refused lo
make a judgment on the sub·
sta nce of ··vour Child From One
lo Six .. But he said he intended
to continue to send any govern·
ment publication to a constituent
who specific ally requests a
copy.
Lugar's aides previously had
sent an unsolicited copy of the
child-rearing manual along with
othe rs to constituents who made
blanket requests for all publica-
tions dealing with child care.
From now on, said Lugar's
press secretary Mark Helmke,
the ma nual will be sent in
response to blanket requests on·
ly when the cons tituent is
warned that certain passages
might offend some readers on
religious grounds, and the con-
stituent requests it anyway.
Warm Tuesday due
Coastal
Some low <IOucls l•le tonlgllt •nd
eerly Tuetd•y mornlno .• ottwnwlse
felr
Coestet low Mt, Intend '4. Co.st.I
lllgll •-70s. Inland near IO Waler
~1.
E lsewhe,., O<Jter <O.Slel ••le"
Point Con<epllon to S.n Nl<OIH I •lend, ~I winch 12 to 10 l11>0ts
will\ ) 10 S·loo• combined HU
lllrougll lonlgllt Otllerwhe, llgllt
Yarlable winch n19ht and mornl119
llours bec:omlng .. ilerly •O to ••
knou. One to l-loot Wtttefly s-11
Mostly clOUdy nlglll and mornlno
llours Sunny allernoons.
V.S. summa.ry
Sllowers fell across lhe central
Rockies. wllll s.-at lllQher eltYa·
lions ... ~V-.rs we,. teal·
tered o ... r INl•H of ArltMIMI, MIS·
sour I. TeHs anCI the G,.•t Lekes
II wes sunny In the Nortllern Plains
west of the Rockies -from Ille souU..rn Rockies Into Ille plains of
Ille Soul-I on 5-y.
Tll11nder and rain combined In
soutllern Oii••-· nortMf"n Tuas and M>lll-lern Teus.
Sllowers allO cr_.r uP near the
Gull Coast near •"" Te•H·LO<llslan•
llOrder, as well H In the us•ern llell
of Illa ONo Velley end In southern
FlorlCMI.
S11nday allernoon temperatures
arO<lnd U.. N11oft ranot<S from• low
of '1 In Mluoule, Mont •• -AOCk
Springs, Wyo .• to • lllgll of u In
McAllen, Teus
Tiie loreceat tor todey <•llect tor
rain 0Y1r Ille Pacific Norlllw .. t
coast. from the nortllern end ce111re1
Rockies ecr,.s llw U-r Mlululppl
Velley lo lhe G,...et LallH n.. N•
tlonel WHtllet Service also Pl"edkb
rein In the ,__,,. -centre! ~
palKlllens
TllvndershOWers will fell O¥er 1119
soulll<flllr•I Plains Into the western
Olllo V•llev. II Wiii ~ sunny o ... r the
western Plains and Celllornl•
tllr<>••911 IN H1re<N $0ut,,_S1 -
Into western TeHs. SunSlllne atao
WU lorKM1 0..., Pf'flll of the 90U111
All•nlk Ital ... tht Hati-t We.11\ff
S.rvlce..,d
Te mperatures
AIO.lly
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AmerlllO ....... 11 ..
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ClllC890
Cincinnati
Ctevet•ncl
Columb~
Oal·FIWltl
O.nver
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0.lrolt
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EIPHO
Hartford
Helene
Honolulu
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lndn81)1iS
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Lillie Ro<k
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Memphis Miami
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Mpls-St.P
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New YorlL
Nor1olk
Oki• City
Omaha
Orl•ndo
Phlledol'lla
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Piiand.Ore Reno
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88ker1tl<tld
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Monterey
Neecllft
NewPOrt lleecll
0 •kt8f'ICI
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Petm Sprlnqs
Pasedena
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Red Bl11ff
Redwood City
S.crem111110
S.llne1
San ee,,,.,dlno
Sall OlitQD
Safi Francltco
S.nl• Ana
S.nt• Barbera
Santa Merle
Santa Mollk•
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Calgary
Edmonton
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CANADA
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TOOAY
S.Cono tow 11 U p.m O.t TUHOAY
FlrstlllQll •·50..,n >.•
Flr111ow 10: 17 a.m. J.4
S.Cond 1119" •:03 p.m . •.l
Se<ond low 11 SS p.m o.t
Su11 Mb • J2 pm .• rlMS T-y 4 SI am.
Moon tels H o o m .. rlMS Tun-dey 2 11p.m
Court cutting
case backlog
FRESNO <AP > -The
state's 5th District Court
of Appeals has begun
trying lo redu ce a
backlog of more than
1,000 cases by using set·
tlement conferences in
civil cases.
Presiding Justice
George A. Brown said
the effort began in July
to suspend appeal pro·
ceedings if the court
asks parties lnvolved to
attend a settlement con·
ference. lf a setUement
is not reache d , the
justice presiding over
that session takes no
part in deciding the ap·
'-----------------------------peal.
_.,, '""•Y II YoU do ROI -"°"' -llY & 30 o"' call boltol• 7 0 rn llnCI YoUf C.OPV "'"be 0*11-td
8'1ilfOl!y ll>d S..n<11y II YOU 00 !'CM
reQtf"9 }'Ovf OOOy by T • rn Qtll .,.io,, 10 a "' a'WI l'(kl• COPY .. 11 llt
-eel
We're Listening •••
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Call the. number below and your message will be recorded.
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642·8086 ..
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 6, 1981 s
AP .........
WHERE'S THE UNIFORM? -The Denver Police Depart-
ment"s newest rookie doesn't need one. 1t ·s a re mote ly con
trolled robot that c an be used in i,urveillan<·e. firefi g hting.
hostage-taking s ituations a nd h a ndling of dangerous
materials.
IRA hunger strike:
What gains made?
LONDON <AP> -In late May,
with four Iris h n ationalist
hunger strikers dead and sup-
port for their cause near its peak
in Northern Ireland. Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher
went to the stricken province
and declared the IRA might well
have played its "last card."
Although Mrs. Thatcher now
appears the immediate victor in
the deadly contest or wills now
that the Irish Republican Army
has ended the seven-month fast.
the IR A sti l l ca n c l aim
enormous gains in recruitment,
political clout and money.
And IRA supporters s ay their
bloody 12-year campaign to oust
the Britis h from Northern
Ireland is far from over, despite
Saturday's announcement.
Throughout the protest. the
Conservative prime minister re-
fused to soften her hardline ap-
proach to demands of the pro-
testing inmates al the Maze
Prison outside Belfast.
To calls for "more flexibility"
from U.S. Sen. Edward M. Ken-
nedy. D-Mass .. and other lead-
ing Irish-American politicians.
Mrs. Thatcher replied that the
Northern Ireland prison regime
was among the most humane
and modern in Europe.
Under no circumstances. she
said, would her government
negotiate with convicted killers
over demands she said would
treat them as political prisoners
-a move the British saw as
legitimizing the outlawed IRA.
·'If we gave in to these de-
mands, what would stop them
from asking for more?·· a gov-
ernment spokesman said in an
interview with The Associated
Press last week.
Ostens ibl y , the hunger
strikers were demanding
changes in the prison regime, in-
cluding the right of free associa-
tion within t h e H-s h aped
cellblocks of the Maze. the right
lo not be assigned prison work
and restoration or parole time
denied protesting prisoners .
But both sides agreed that the
guerrillas were seeking restora-
tion of "special category" status
granted them in 1972 and then
ANALYSIS
abolished by Britain in 1976.
The I RA did not win special
status for the prisoners. but it is
widely accepted that by focusing
worldwide attention on the pro-
test the guerrilla movement has
gene rated scores of new recruits
and millions of dollars in aid,
e s peciall y fro m I RA sy m·
path1 zers in the United States.
L o n g tim e o bs ervers of
Northern Ireland's sectarian
turmoil fear the IRA , having
s uffered a setback in the hunger
strike. mi ght step up its attacks
on police and troops But it was
no t expect ed that anothe r
hunger strike would soon be
mounted.
The hunger strike sparked the
worst wave of violence to hit
Northern Ire land in recent
me mory. Since I RA guerrilla
Bobby Sands started the protest
March 1, 64 people -including
31 members of the province's
security forces have been
killed violently
All efforts to mediate the con-
flict failed lo move either s ide.
But in the end, it was the rel-
a ti vcs of the prisoners who
proved the decisive factor
As the protest dragged on.
Roman Catholic priests focused
their attention on convincing the
families that nothing was to be
gained from allowing their loved
ones to die
Laguna c hambe r
nuxe r sch eduled
A Chamber of Commerce
e venin g mixer will be held
Wednesday at Las Bris as
restaurant in Laguna Beach
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m .
The mixer is open to chamber
m embers and guests. No·host
cocktails will be served, as well
as hors d'oeuvres, and door
prizes will be awarded. For in·
formation. call the chamber at
494·1018.
Public
aid 'not
needed'
NJ::W YORK <AP> -A ma-
JOrity of Americans t!tinks that
most people who receive mone)'
from welfare could get along
without it If they tried, accord·
iog to the latest Associated
Press-NBC News poll
The poll isaid 55 percent
believe wetrare recipients could
get along without 1t if they tried,
while 32 percent said they really
need the help. Thirteen percent
said they were not sure. •
The poll contacted 1,601 adults
by telephone Monday and Tues·
day in a nationwide scientific
random sampling.
The results of the latest poU
remained consis tent with the
last time the same question was
asked in an NBC News poll in
1977. when 59 percent said
we lfare recipients could get
along wilhQUl it, 30 percent said
they really need the help and 11
pe rcent were unsure.
Pres ident Reagan has said be
wants to reduce waste a nd
cheating in the welfare system,
with more than $27 billion in
budget cuts coming from "en-
titlement" programs such as
food stamps and Aid to Families
with Dependent Children.
Ne w eligibility rules have
already reduced the nearly 4
million families which had been
receiving welfare by more than
10 percent and cul benefits to an
additional 280,000 families.
In the latest poll. women were
more likely t han men to say
most welfare recipients don't re·
ally need the help. A majority or
while respondents said welfare
recipients don't really need the
help, while a majority or blacks
said they do
People who earn more than
$35,000 a year were more likely
than respondents in lower in ·
come groups to s ay welfare
recipients really need the help.
On the politic al s pectrum.
Republicans and conservatives
were the most likely lo say
welfare r ecipients could get
along without it if they tried.
And college graduates were
m ore likely than people who do
not have college degrees to say
that welfare recipients really
need the help
Chimps have
high limit
for signs
LINCOLN. Neb. <AP> -Two
psychologis t s wh o "talk" lo
chimpanzees sa y they haven't
approached the lim it to the
numbe r o f hand s igns the
animals can learn
Allen and B_eatnce Gardner of
the Univers ity of Nevada at
Reno were guest speakers al the
1981 Psyc hology Fai r at
Ne brasks Wesleyan University.
The Gardners began experi·
ments in communicating with
chimps in 1966 with an animal
named Was hoe. who became
famous for her ability to use
Amer ica n Standa rd Sign
Language. .
Gardner said some chimps
have learned as many as 200
s igns. but they can learn many
more.
··we haven't gone anywhere
near the limit." he said.
Mrs. Gardner said it is dif·
ficult to determine how mucti
the chimps understand.
··Probably they understan~
more than they produce," sh~
said
JU St right for thi9
timz ofyz.ar ...
a m ixtunz. of llicz.
soi'Uz.st ~ loomtz.d
sh<z.tlond yorns end
th~ truz. rolore of
autumn. taikmz.d
just fur us,with
hock~ p.::x:kcztB
and eidCZvints.
@)~o@@)§@
44 Fo1hlon l1lortd • N~ &oclt • 714/644·5'110
1001 Wnnuood Blud.. ~ Vtlloge. 2J3/20IJ.m3
1
-'
s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 6, 1881
Debt ehMades
Cei ling bill sparks play-acting
8 y WALTER R. MEARS
A•9"&WC..: I
WASHINGTON -For
polltical play-acting, It's hard to
top a debate like the one on the
trillion-dollar debt celling
Congress has jus t passed.
Everybody knows It has to pass
In the end, so it becomes a vehi·
cle for proposals that don't stand
a chance but look good on paper.
The Congress that Is authorii·
lng more borrowing can bemoan
deficit spending. The president
who asked for the increase can
say be detests the whole idea but
bad to do it because of the
deficits he inherited.
That's been going on for
years.
Whether Republican or
Democratic, presidents have to
propose increases in the debt
ceiling before the federal debt
bumps up against the old one~
Otherwise. the government
couldn't borrow money.
But for the latest increase, the
government would have had no
borrowing authority over last
Wednesday, and the Treasury
would have run out of money
·altogether as of today. Obvious·
ly. Congress wasn't going to let
that happen.
So the limit was raised, for the
20th time in little more than a
decade. It now stands al Sl.079
trillion, $94 billion more than the
old limit.
But first, Democrats made the
political record. They proposed
an assortment of politically em·
barrassing amendments. None
passe<\_, but they didn't expect
any would. When it came time lo
pass the increase. they made
· sure that Republican votes pro·
vided the majority to raise the
limit.
When the White Hou se
belonged to the Democrats.
Republi c an members of
Congress dld exactly the same
thing. Then they campaigned
against Democrats for voting to
increase the debt limit.
It was the second increase
since President Reagan took of.
fice. The first came Feb. 7.
Ironically. that also was the first
congressional action on a
Reagan proposal. The ad·
ministration would have pre·
ferred a more substantial in·
crease then, to avoid the em~ar·
rassment that went with raisln1
the limit again. Democrats
weren't about to buy that.
While the administration bad
to have the increase, Reagan
called it a warning that should
underline the need for approval
of his budget cuts. so the debt
won't keep going up.
"Jn just the past decade, our
national debt bas more than
doubled," he said. "And in the
next few days it will pass the
trillion dollar mark. One trillion
dollars of debt -if we as a na·
lion need a warning, let it be
that."
Part of the debt is interest on
the debt, which is expected to
run between $96 billion and $106
billion during the next year.
Reagan said interest alone ex·
ceeds the combined cost of all
federal education. nutrition and
health programs.
·'The $1 trillion debt figure can
stand as a monument to the
policies of the past which
brought it about, policies which
as of today are reversed," he
said.
While Re publicans com·
plained about deficits .
Democrats forced them to vole
against some politically attrac·
live amendments to the measure
raising the deficit limit. One
would have tied the increase to
improvement of school lunch
menus. Another would have in·
structed Reagan to press the
Federal Reserve Board for
policy changes to lower interest
rates. A third would have re·
duced the tax deduction for busi·
ness entertainment to produce
an extra $700 million in revenues
and wouJd have earmarked the
proceeds for school lunch pro·
grams.
There were proposals to
postpone Reagan's income tax
cuts until deficits come down . or
until interest rates drop.
Another would have increased
taxes on the oil industry and put
the proceeds into the financially
fragile Social ~urity fund.
Each was debated and dutiful·
ly voted down. But not forgotten.
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'Nee d'
• paying
opposed
NEW YORK (AP ) -A nearly
3·1 m,Yority of Americana OP·
poses the concept of baslJl1
Social Security payments solt\ly
on rtnanclal need rather than
primarily on payroll contrlbu·
lions .
An Associated Preu·NBC
News poll, of 1,601 adults
telephoned Monday and Tuesday
in a scientific random sampling,
aJso said that Americans have
little confidence the Social
Security system will have the
funds to provide retirement
benefits for them.
Among people who said they
. ..,,.
. . ..
..
..
INDICTED Frank P . Balistrieri leaves his
Milwaukee home after a federal grand jury
indicted him and 15 other men for allegedly
violating racketeering laws and engaging in
"" .......... illegal gambling activities. Balistrieri has
had heard or read or Reagan's
latest economic propos-als, 29 .. .,
percent said they favored the ···,
portion of his original plan re·
ducing benefits for some people
·:
been called the head of organized crime in
Milwaukee by the FBI.
who retired before age 65.
Reagan cuts start to pinch
School, government programs implement red uctions
In contrast, 43 percent or the
respondents in last May's AP·
NBC News poll said they sup-
ported the early retirement pro-
visions or the original plan -• ii
which was withdrawn last week ! ::
in favor of a bipartisan task · ••
force charged with suggesting
Social Security changes.
By The Associated Press
Sc hool lunch prices in
Oklahoma are going up by 15 to
20 cents, a dozen lawyers will
have to be let go from Vermont's
legal a.id program and a 32-year·
old Vietnam veteran in a Florida
drug care center is worried
about where he will live.
Stanek, head of the Governor's
Office for Planning and Pro·
gramming in Iowa. Orricials
kept the CET A workers on the
payroll until midnight, trying,
unsuccessfully, to find a way to
save the jobs.
ln a nationally televised
speech last week, Reagan hinted
that one solution might be to
$14,000 to $11,000. provide benefits only for those
In Oklahoma, schools are ra.is· who need them:
ing lunch prices by 15 cents to 20 "There is, however, a sizable
cents. Ten of the state's 22 Com· percentage of recipients who are
munity Action Programs are go-adequately provided for by
ing out or business. and 1,500 pensions or other income and
families will stop getting help s hould not be adding to the
under the Aid to Dependent financial burden of Social
Children program. Security."
"Just wait until we see little In the latest AP-NBC News
... ...
... .•
The warnings about the im·
pact of the Reagan budget cuts
are beginning to hit home.
Reductions in some areas
have been under way ever since
legislation was passed trimming
a wide variety of social pro·
grams. But the start of the new
fiscal year Thursday provided a
final deadJine for many.
The slate transportation agen·
cy in Vermont announced 30 peo-
ple will be laid orr next week :
the legal a.id program will be cut
by 25 percent and 12 lawyers will
have to go.
State officials said that in the
past they were successful In
finding jobs for CET A workers
whose positions were phased
out; 80 percent either got new
jobs, joined the armed services
or entered employment training
programs. But Jeanne Van
Vlandren, director oC employ·
ment and training for Vermont,
said the success won 't last. "It's
one thing to find jobs for 10 peo·
pie a day. Finding them for 1,000
people is something else again."
children that don't have the poll, however , 72 percent said .•
money to buy these lunches," Social Security should continue
warned W.C. Pulliam, superin· to be pa.id to people who qualify
tendent of schools in Oklahoma's for them because of their payroU
Coal County. contributions. Just 24 percent
An Associated Press sampling
found people being affected in
many ways. ·
Officials in Washington state said benefits should be paid only
predicted the crunch will come according to need, and 4 percent
gradually. "Things will be dif. were not s ure.
ficult throughout the month as Minorities, women and people
people apply and we deal with over age SO were the most likely
the changes and people find they to say Social Security payments
aren't eligible," said Bob Utter should be based on payroll con·
in the welfare office in Olympia. tributions rather than need.
"There could be some unhappy Workers currently pay 13.3
folks." percent of their first $29,700 in
Greg Rich, 32, is worried annual earnings -up to about
The last of 300,000 public
service jobs paid for by the
federal government under the
Comprehensiv.e Employment
and Training Act are being
phased out, for example, at a
savings of $4 .6 billion. Four hun-
dred CETA employees in
Delaware worked their last day
Wednesday.
"We had to lay off 150 people
at midnight last night," said Ed
Vermont welfare officials said
2,500 people now receiving food
stamps will be cut ort by new
eligibility requirements -the
maximum annual income a
family o( four can have and st.ill
get food stamps dropped from
about where he will live. Rich, a $3,950 a year -into the Social
veteran who says he started us· Security fund . Benefits are
ing drugs in Vietnam, now lives based primarily on payroll con·
in Village south. a Miami drug tribulions. with workers who
care center. Matt Gissen, the have paid more in contributions
center's director, said budget generally receiving higher
cuts will force the progTam to benefits than those who have
cut its client load by _25-.:..pe_r_c_e_n_t. __ c_o_n_tr_i_bu_t_.ed_l_es_s_. ------
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•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981 s
~TiffiU~:
State hills influenced by money
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The
blatory or a bill as it moves
throu1b the state Le1lslature
can often be traced by the 1reen.
Bills holly souaht by special
Interest 1roups brin1 buae sums
o r money to lofluentlal
lawmakers and even the 1ov-
ernor, accordln1 to financial
records at the secretary or
state's office.
Take a controversial bill this
year that the beer distributors
very much wanted, but con·
sumer groups abhorred.
The bill , A8429 by As·
semblyman Frank Vicencla, D·
Bellflower, would have prohibit·
e d beer distributor s from
offering discounts to stores that
buy in quantities.
Vicencia introduced the bill in
February at the bee r dis-
tributors urging because Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. 's Alcoholic
Bevera1e Control Department
was plannln1 in January to
throw out a SS-year-old rule ban·
ning such volume discounts.
Vicencla claimed that the ban
on dlacounta assures that the
large retail chains cannot un-
dersell the small stores. But op-
ponents, including the grocery
chains, said the bill would keep
the price or beer high. They said
small stores could get together
to buy beer, as they now do for
wine and liquor, on wbicb there
are no volume discount restric-
tions.
Tbe bill zipped through the As·
sem bly Governmental Organiza.
tion Committee, which Vicencla
chairs, 13-1, and through Ways
and Means Committee 18-0. It
passed the full Assembly ~on
May 14.
1t was garn ering som e
negative editorials, but the votes
were sWJ there. Legislators re-
ct 1 v ed lots of money from
1roups behind the bill -con-
tributions from dozens of beer
distributors.
The Beer Wholesalers Com·
munity Arfairs Fund gave
$27,000 to legialatora between
Jan. 1 and March 17; another
$31,000 between March 18 and
May 16; $30,000 between March
17 and June 30, and $34.500 ln the
latest reporting period, July 1 to
Sept. 17.
Altogether, 58 of the 80 AB·
sembly members and 27 of~e
40 senators got $250 to $1,000 or
more. The Malt Beverage lnduat.ry
We lfare Fund gave lo 24
legislators.
The bill was approved by the
Senate 22·9 on Sept. 15, the last
day of the session.
On the Assembly side , Vicen-
cia was expected to seek the
final vote, concurrence in Senate
amendments, that night. But
surprisingly, he did not.
He told reporters that instead,
the administration of Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr., which initially
opposed the bill, had agreed to
keep Rule 105, so the bill was not
needed.
Lo and behold, the latest Beer
Wholesale rs report shows a
$2,000 contribution to a fund·
raiser for Gray Davis, Brown's
chief of staff who might run for
office next year. And the group
had earlier in the year given
$1 ,000 to a Brown fund-raiser .
One or the bill's opponents, the
California Retailers Association,
also was a generous contributor
through its Retailers Good Gov-
ernment Council, giving $500 to
$2,500 to 37 legislators this year.
Windfall profits tax said detluctible
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The
state Franchise Tax Board says
the federal windfall profits tax is
deductible from California's in-
come, bank and corporation
taxes .
Board officials estimated late
last week that the decision could
cost the state $70 million a year.
"It is not an income tax. It is a
Noise s uit
thrown out
SACRAME NTO !AP >
Neighbors of a noisy Lodi steel
plant can't collect damages for
t respassing if t h eir houses
weren't harmed by the noise.
says a s tate appeal court.
Noise alone. without property
damage, is not enough for a
trespass s uit. a unanimous
three-member panel of the 3rd
Dis trict Court of Appeal has
ruled.
The steel fabricating plant is
owned by the Interlake Steel Co.
It makes "clanging and thud-
ding" noises. but there •was no
evid ence that the neighbors
could feel any sound vibrations
or s uffered any property
damage, said Justice Hugh
Evans.
deductible lax,'· board member
Ernest Dl"onenburg Jr. said
after t he board voled 3-0 to
direct its staff to regard tbe
feder al tax as a legal deduction.
The issue was whether the
profits tax is an incom e or ex-
cise tax, according to Bruce
Wa lker, the board's chie f
counsel. Federal income taxes
are not deductible from state
levies.
Despite the reference to pro·
fits in the tax's title, the board
agreed with a staff opinion that
it was deductible.
"It's a modified severance
tax. It's an excise tax," Dronen·
burg said in an interview. ''It 's
close to a severance tax."
Deputy Controlle r Wa lter
Harvey, sitting in for state Con-
troller Ken Cory. the board's
cha irman, said the Legislature
could override the decision it
disagrees with.
· · l had a long soul-searching
period over this issue,'' Harvey
said. "I think the Legislature
had its shot to te ll us they think
it· s not deductible , as the
KapiJoff bill would do."
A bill by Assemblym an Larry
Kapiloff, D-San Diego, would
declare the tax non-deductible.
It passed the Assembly but was
not taken up by Kapiloff for a
vote in the Senate Revenue and
Taxation Committee this year.
An aide said it was Kapiloff's
inte ntion , at least before
Thursday's decision , to take the
bill up again ln 1982. Kapiloff
was out of the state and not
available for comment.
Walker said the decision
would benefit oil companies
"and anyone who had r oyalty in·
terest in oil."
The profits tax, first imposed
last year, is a levy on revenue
above a base level. Its backers
said oil companies should be
more heavily taxed because
thei r income was up sharply.
Parole protested
LOS ANGELES <AP > -The
Los Angeles County Board of
Super visors voted to protest to
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. the
parole of a man convicted of
killing a sheriff's deputy after'
serving only two years and five
months in prison
..........
BUGGED B Y MEOFLY Ric hard Ro m i nge r . s tate
agriculture director. recently told a Board of Ag ri c ulture
m eeting in Sacram ento. that the state is "c lose to dropping
out of areas first s prayed" in the fi ght against the Mediter-
ranean fruit fly ... Rominger is backed by a fra med collec-
tion of insects.
Welfare benefit cuts delay will allow comments
SACRAMENjO <AP> -The
state offi ce that approves new
regulations has delayed welfare
benefit cuts for two months to
give more than 300,000 affected
persons time to comment.
The Office of Administrative
Law r ecently ruled that the
Reagan administration welfare
cuts. effective last Thursday
with the new federal flscal year,
should be delayed 60 days in
California.
•'The welfare recipients wiU
continue to receive the same
level of benefits that wiU be
computed in the same way as
in the past until the department
completes the formal adoption
process and resubmits the reg-
ulations," said OAL Director
Gene Livingston .
T he De partme nt of Social
Services had wanted the new
regulations to make the cuts in
Aid to Families with Dependent
Children eligibility to go into ef·
feet as an emergency by Nov. 1.
Because of the federal cuts,
the state regulations will re-
move 122,000 people from the
rolls and cut benefits for another
198,000 persons.
The Legislature recessed Sept.
15 without passing a biU that
would have made the law
changes necessary to make the
cuts, so the department had to
write new regulations.
People who need People
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LA COUNTY
Cerrlto1/Lakewood 11881 Del Amo Blvd. in Ce1Titoe at Pioneer,
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Chat1worth/Northriclse 9143 De Soto Ave. at Nordhoff, (213> 882-5912
Encino 17031 Ventura Blvd~ Weet of Balboa, (2131 986-M30
HollJwood 7080 Holtywood. BJvd., Comer 1A Brea Ave.
at a.ta Medical Center, (213) "69-6307
Lonr Beadl '101 Atlantic Blvd~ Comer of Canon, (213> •26-8874
'Jbrran« 20040 Hawthorne Blvd. at Del Amo Blvd ..
in &be Beet Plua Cent.er, (218) 5'2·3611
Wfft Loe ARSelee 1914 So. Bundy (near Olympic Blvd.>, !213) 820-7571
ORANGE COUNTY
ButN Park 610 So. Buch Blvd. Sout.h of Lincoln Ave~ (714) 826-0381 eo..a M..a 2300 Harbor Blvd., <Behind Thrifty Druf), (714) 6'9-3368
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Oranae 622 Eut Kat.ella Ave .. Weet of'J\.tltin Ave .. C71") 639-2441
WHtmJn8ltr 6767 Westm1nater Ave. at Colden West, (714) 894-3887
San Diero Announcini our neWMt location, -406 Camino Del ·
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INLAND LOCATIONS
Montclair Announcln1 our new location, 9386 Mona VIM
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Orange Coast DAii. Y PILOT/t.4ond1y. October 5, 1981
Deregulation brings
more federal rules
In 1978, legislation was
passed that. by appearances.
would drastically restr ict the
federal government's involve-
ment in regulation of the United
States airline indust ry. H was
known as the Airline Deregula-
tion Act.
The Intent of the bill was to
let the forces of a free market
economy dictate which airlines
wo u Id Cly betwee n vario us
destinations. Gone would be the
days when the gover~nt, via
the Civil Aeronautics Board .
wou ld make s uch determina-,
lions .
An important provision of
that bill was that proprietors of
a irports could not attempt to
become ··mini CABs. ,. That is. at-
tempt to take control of airline
routes.
To listen to the federal gov-
ernment. Orange County govern-
ment is attempting to circumvent
that restriction in its handling of
the affairs o f John Wayne
Airport. The governm ent is ada-
m ant in its position that county
government is trying to over-
restrict free access to anv and all
airlines that would Like 'to serve
Orange County.
We disagree. tn fact. Orange
County has done a n admirable
job, given many competing
pressures. to grant access to
several newcomers. including
Frontier Airlin es. Western
Airlines . a nd. most recently.
Pacific Southwest Airlines. And
the county has done so without in-
1Crt!asing the overall noise impact
on residents living beneath jet
departure tracks.
While some questions may
exist over which airlines have
how many flights, the fact re-
m ains that the doors to John
Wayne Airport were not shut.
Thus. it is hard to understand
just what the government wants
from the fOUnty in the access
debate.
Even more disturbing is the
way t he federal government,
which via the deregulation act
was supposed to get out of the
"airl ine regulatio n business.
seems to be doing just the op-
posile. Its involvement is increas-
ing . The government's decision to
become involved in a lawsuit
challenging the method by which
the county has allocated flights
and its subsequent threaf to
withhold a $1.4 million grant
seem ample testimony to that
fact.
Under the guise of deregula-
tion. the federal government still
is committed to taking care of
the interests of the airlines.
Granted national interest takes
precedence over local interests in
most situations . But we find no
compellin_g national interest in
what the federal government is
doing in ignoring local concerns
at .John Wayne Airport.
No holiday spirit
With the C . S. Postal Service.
t here's no good-news, bad-news
syndrome . It's all bad news.
Imagine a stamp costing 20
cents. a nd a postal ~a rd 13 cents.
Only 10 years ago it was 8 cents
and in our Lifetimes there were
two mail deliveries a dav.
It will happen Nov: 1 unless
an appeal by the National As -
sociation of G r eeti ng Card
Publishers is upheld or the in -
cr ease is at least delayed.
·'The Postal Service cannot
continue to deliver your mail at
1978 prices." said Robert Hardes-
ty. chairman of the Board of Gov-
ernors of the Pos tal Service.
Probably true. but then
many of us might feel that we
didn't get our money's worth
with the 1978 prices, either .
And the news is gloomier
a head.
T he rates will stav in effect
··no less than two ye'ars .·· '>aicl
the postmaster general.
Pardon our cynicism. but this
is the same outfit that raised the
price of a stamp earlier this year
from 15 cents to 18. ·
Does anvone reallr think the
Postal Service will hold off an in -
crease for two vears'! There's as
much a chance of that as a
decrease in the rates
This is the s ame Postal
Service, by the way. that took a
back-door approach to obtain the
increase. Three times the Postal
Rate Commission rejected one.
But the Postal Service ignored
the commission and announced
the increase anyway.
We hope that the appeal of
the greeting card industry will be
upheld by the courts to stave off
this unnecessary hike.
Otherwise that extra S3 the
average worker is getting in his
pay envelope each week as a re-
sult of the first t ax cut simply
will go in one pocket and out the
other
And who but the Postal
Service could pull off the rate
hike just before Chr istmas'?
Law still toothless
For the fourth year the state
Legislature has buckled under to
pressure from the insurance lob-
by and failed lo pass a bill that
would put teeth in the state's so-
cal led .. mandatory " a uto in·
surance law.
This time the bill's sponsor.
Assemblyman Richard Robinson
of Santa Ana. realizin g his
ch ances were s lim to none. de-
cided to hold his bill over until
next year.
Which simply means the un-
insured motorist -estimated by
the Department o f Motor Ve-
hicles to number up to 20 per-
cent of the state's 16 million vehi:
cle owners -will continue to be
entitled to al least one "free" ac-
cident before the law catches up
with him.
That's because the question
of car insurance now doesn't
com e up until a driver is involved
in a reportable accident. If that
happens, he's ordered to get in-
surance. But if it doesn't, he can
save the cost of insurance pre·
miums, while the law-abiding
driver has t o s he ll out more
money to protect himself from
•
the possibility of being hit by an
uninsured driver.
Since OMV figures show un-
insured drivers have 1.74 more
accidents than t hose who carr v
insurance and are cited fo.r
ei~ht times as many major viola-
tions. that unhappy possibiUty is
not too r emote.
The bill that was bypassed
this year. like its defeated
prede.cessors. would have re-
quired owners to s how proof .of
ins urance when a vehicle is re-
gistered, or registration is re-
newed. No insurance. no registra-
tion.
Insurance industr y opposi-
llon apparently has to do with
fear that the state mig ht become
more involved with regulating
t h e industry -especial -
ly insurance rates -if there
were too m any complaints from
drivers who felt they could not af-
ford to carry the required cov·
er age. -
So the potential victims of
the uninsured must continue lo
buy themselves extra protection.
because the existing state law is
ineffective.
Opinions expressed In the space above are thOse of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex-pressed on this page are those of their authors and art ists. Reader comment is invit -
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O .. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71')
642-4321.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Thomas P. Haley
PJJb llSher
Thomas A. Murphlne
Editor
B•rbar• Krelblch
Edltorlal Page Editor
FBI to probe Taiwan spying,
WASHINGTON -The mysterious
death of Prof. Chen Wen-cheng of
Carnegie-Mellon University on a visit to
his native Taiwan has finally moved the
State Department to examine the
problem of spying by Taiwanese agents
in the United States.
Chen was found dead shortly after he
had been questioned for 13 hours by
Taiwanese authorities. Their official ex-
planation of his death as either accident
or suicide is viewed with extreme s kep-
ticism by the State Department; the
mystery may never be solved satisfac·
torily.
Wh at particularly disturbs the depart-
ment -beyond the personal tragedy of
Chen's death -is that his lengthy in-
terrogation by Taiwanese authorities
betrays their detailed knowledge of the
pr ofessor's activities in the United
States.
TAIWANESE S PYING on their
critics here has been no secret. I report-
ed two years ago on a top-secret Senate
Foreign Relations Committee document
that described the Taiwanese sur-
veillance operations .
A recent , highly sens itive State
Department memorandum on the sub-
ject has been reviewed by my associate
Lucette Lagnado. lt suggests that the
department is finally thinking of doing
something about it.
The department "is initiating meet-
ings with the FBI and the Department
of Justice to review information on
Taiwan-KMT (Kuomintang> activities
in the United States." the memo states.
The FBI will try to develop evidence
of i llegal surveillance by the
Taiwanese, including those with t he
Q
-JA-Cl-AN-D-fR-SD-1 -d
pseudo-diplomatic status accorded
members of the Taiwanese govern-
ment's Coordination Council for North'
American Affairs. This has been
Taiwan's equivalent of an e mbassy
since formal diplomatic relations were
curtailed a few years ago.
"IF THE FBI is able to develop good
evidence of direction of surveillance ac-
tivities by persons who have CCNAA
cover, we could PNG them." the memo
says. PNG is the abbreviation for
declaring a foreigner "persona non
grata," or unwelcome in the United
States. The indjvidual is then expelled.
As for t hose Taiwanese agents who
are not protected by the CCNAA's func-
tion al immunity. the State Department
memo suggests that "they might be
prosecuted under the Foreign Agents
Registration Act. which seems to be the
most serious thing the Justice Depart-
ment can come up with."
At besl, the memo. adds, these mD~
actions "would only touch the tip .pt
what most KMT watchers think is q
iceberg." ·
A Car more effective way to deal wi~
the situation. the memo suggests. woula
be to cut back on the number o,
Taiwanese governm ent personnel a~
lowed into this countrv. "If we wanted
to really make a dent· in this activity, I
think we would have to start restricting,
perhaps selectively, the number of
CCNAA personnel." the memo writer
explains.
That suggestion has in fact bejsl
made by Rep. J im Leach, R-Iowa. ~e
and Rep. Steve Solarz, D-N . 'I:.
chairman of I he House Asian and
Pacific Affairs subcommittee, have
been bringing pressure on the State
Department lo take action. :·
AS A RESULT of a secret meeting of
the Solarz subcommittee and top of·
ficials of the FBI and Justice Depart-
ment, "the FBI has alerted its offices
around the country to report any allega-
tions of spy activity, and DOJ (Justice)
has indicated they will prosecute
whenever a case can be made." the
secret memo notes. ·
To add teeth to the cr ackdown, Solarz
has s uggest ed that arms sales to
Taiwan be made contingent on ·a
certification by the president that thie
Taiwanese have ended their sur -
veillance activities here.
Pointless parole hearings continue
Despite the testimony of prison of-
ficials. and guards as well. as to his
"exemplary conduct and record" since
his incarceration, authorities have de·
nied parole for Richard Schoenfeld.
It is an interesting case for, consider-
ing his age, his previous unblemished
record and his good conduct in prison,
along with the fact he is the scion of a
wealthy San Mateo county family which
stands ready to aid in his rehabilitation,
· Schoenfeld normally would be an ideal
candidate for parole.
But, as Sen. Bill Richardson ob-
served, "It matters not how much of a
model prisoner he has been or how good
his prospects for rehabilitation may be.
It wouldn't matter i( he has now found
religion and wants to dedicate his life to
the ministry. Justice demands that the
length of imprisonment relates to the
magnitude of the crime. Society
m ust be assured that a specific offense
will bring a specific sentence."
AND THE magnitude of Schoen-
feld's crime was such that it can be ex-
pected it will be many years before his
release.
He was one of the trio who kidnapped
a busload of Chowchilla school children
and whisked them away to a quarry
near Livermore where they buried the
children, bus and aJI, abandoning them
to fate.
In the annals of crime it ranks as one
of the most heartless and cruel treat-
ment of innocent victims ever recorded.
Fortunately, the children escaped death
IARL WATfRS
due to the initiative of the bus driver
who dug himself out after 16 hours.
bringing rescuers to the scene.
Because the kidnapping took
place in 1976 during the period the death
penalty for such a crime was in limbo
by reason of the supreme court decision
nullyfying capital punishment, the trio
escaped execution. Tries:f and convicted,
they were given life sentences for their
revolting crime and committed to state
prison in February 1978.
That was barely more than three
years ago. So why then was the pri.son
board listening to a plea for parole? It
seems a useless and time wasting effort
in the case of one about whom Donald
Whyte. Alameda County deputy district
attorney, in an impassioned plea said,
•·our position is that il was a life sen-
tence and, by God, this man should
spend his life here, at least until his hair
is as gray as min e."
WHAT IS MORE jarring to the
sensibilities is that the parole hearuag
was his fourth since entering pris ()I).
Asked why the board consumed its ti~
and . those of others in a hearing thJtt
held not the remotest chance for tilt?
granting of a parole. the answer was
thal the law requires an annual review
of persons sentenced under the old in·
determinate sentencing laws.
So Schoenfeld wilJ continue to make
an appearance before the parole board
each year until his release or until the
law is changed. There are about 2,600
other inmates in the same position,
serving under indeterminate sentences
wi th annual reviews of their cases.
Since passage of the law eliminating
indeterminate sentences. those serving
life for murder must serve a minimum ,
of 16 years before parole. They may not
then appear before the board until one
year prior to parole eligibility.
In the meantime th e prison ad-
ministration has requested legislation,
which is now in progress. to relieve the
need for the automatic yearly review of
cases such as Schoenfeld.
Coping skill depends on shifting views
What mainly distinguishes the people
who keep on coping from those who
br eak down in one way or another -in-
to apath y or depression or self·
destructive violence -is the copers'
normal ability to shift their points of
vision.
You may have seen those odd draw-
ings in articles or tests: a flight of
SYlllY HARRIS
stairs going up, but lr you look long
enough, it's going down; a couple kiss·
ing that suddenly turns into a vase; a
pretty girl who is transformed into an
old witch.
We can see one or the other of these
pairs, but not both at the same lime. As
we lceep looking, they keep alternating.
And neither is "truer" than the other;
each picture is "real" at different
moments.
SO 1T IS in moat. of our lives, unleas
we happen to be e:xcepUonany lucky or
excep\lonally unlucky. For the average
run, we are fortun•te or untortun•te. depen~ more on mood than on obJtt· Ove clriumatancea. And one mood 1uc·
I 4
ceeds the other with reasonable reg·
l,llarity; we know it, anticipate it, and
learn to live with it.
In our jobs, in our marriages. in our
social lives, we commonly veer between
sa tisfaction and disappointment.
Almost no one has it as good as he <or
she > would like , or as bad as he
sometimes likes to think. Most trips are
bump3!i. and t.bere is no seat belt.
On Monday, the job m ay look sour .
the marriage stale. the children un-
satisfactory, the future bleak -and. by
some absolute standard , there is a piece
of reality in this. On Tuesday or Wed-
nesday. our vision shifts, and we begin
to tot up our advantages and benefits;
we stop sighing, "ft could be better,"
and begin purring, "ll could be much
worse."
THE FACf IS that both views are
true and both are false, ln the same way
and at the same time, though our angle
of m ental vision does not permit us lo
view them both together. The bat we
can do, u copers, ls wall It out unW the
bag turns baek lo a pretty gtrl. We can
accept the fact that one picture la u
valid u ltl oppo1ite.
The breaker-downers, for reasons 11.lU
obacu~, seem to lack thla optical Oex·
iblllty. They set Jammed in one ~·
Uon: for thtm tile at.atn never ;o qp. lb~ hac neve vantab.N, the vaae never
'
turns mto a kissing couple. Some switch.
is missing, or d e fective, or un-
developed, that would provide them
with relief and comfort, that would
lighten their load so that it is bearable,
if not pleasant. .
I suspect that the alcoholics, the dJ'US·
takers, the walking wounded among us,
suffer from this unna med ailment; t.hat
many we call "disturbed." to one
degree or another, simply are unable on
their own to achieve a binocular view of
the human condition, and seek it ol}Jy
by escape into a world t hey make for
themselves. .:
It must come as a sever. blow lo the
"favored airlines" at JC>hn WQQe to
find U>e federal court doesn't lake tbe
same view a.a the 1u~rviaors the)' U..
10 carefully nurtured.
G.~&.
1 -GUNS AUCT~ONED -Guns
once owned by Ernest Hem-
~p g way, above, Charles
Lindbergh, below. and Kit
Carson will be among S2
million worth of rare and
h1storic firearms to be auc·
tioned in New York City
Wednesday. ·
---..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 5. 1981 ' .41
Valley may req uest park acreage lease
Fountain Valley City Council
members are considerln1 an of·
fer to Orange County officials
that could lead to the develop.
m eot of a second 18-bole golf
course at Mile Square Park.
Councilman Euaene Van Oask
said he b working on a formal
requeat that the county lease to
Fountain Valley the un ·
developed acreage In county·
owned Mile Square Park.
The city then would seek a
private developer to build an
18 holt' l'Xt'CUl l\1' !>Ill' l{lllf
couri.t', driving 1 ,111~1· .11111
resluurunt on Lht•st• KI lll'l l'" m
the northwcl!ll S<.'l'lllln 11f tht•
park, l.x1rdt•rcd by B 111uld111r~I
Street and Ed1111t~r f\ \ 1•11111•
Th~ count~ lb,•lf h,1-1 pl1111:\ to
develop a nine hoh• p.11 ·tlu t't'
golr cours e, group p11·ni1· arl:'a
fast food rt'Slauranl artcl po~<;ll1I\
a driving range on lh~ J l'n·agt·
Van Dask saitl lht· l'th 1'<111hl
s a ve t h e t·ount' :al 11lo1tt ~:·
million in antidpatt 11 d1•\ t•l1 p
Society headquarters
1111 11t 1·1Hili; hy as11u m1ng
11•s11ori,1t11iltv lor bringing a
I 11· •c·r 1•111f 1·ou1 'it' to the pa rk
111 111 Prl \
I h•· 11 1111l 1lm:111 l·ontendi, that
I ht Jll 1 ft l'I •"' llllld ge nerate
"' l'ill••I 11w111111· r111 Fountain
\ i.!lll! \\llhuul 1 t•11u11·1n.-: an 1n·
t' I 1111•111 of l'll \ fund!-)
\ .111 11:1~i.. q11;111-t1 om.· <.'1 ty starr
111t111l11 1 1!'i 1t:Jyin~. ·our only
'" ' '"'old h1• th,11 of transport-n tli" 1 h1·t·lo. LO tht• bank "
I 111lt 1 \ .111 1 >usk <; plari the de·
I
open
velop.-r would puy <.'Onstqu.•llon
<·osts ai. well as a lease fee to the
city
The councilman said he plans
to pre1tent the 18·hole golf t'Ourse
propo1tal to Orange County
Supervisor Roger Stanton, a
former Fountain Valley coun-
cilman. who will bl' asked to
carry it through the proper
county channels.
Last week. city council mem -
bers and the Fountain Valley
parka and recreation com·
missioners met with 11everal gotr
experts lo discuss Van Dusk's
proposal
Former PGA tour member
Jimmy Clark, who operates a
gotr shop 1n Huntington Beach,
s aid he t.old city officials there is
a great demand for an addi-
tional short-hole golf course ,
especially a m ong local senior
citizens and beginning golfers
-PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Autlwrities aim to avoid r epeat of voult epz snde
County forms
agency for
Aliso work The Costa Mesa Historical
Society's new headquarters
should open in about six weelrs,
a city spokesman has a n-
nounced.
Embarrassed a uthorities
hope, however, that the opening
will be s moother than that of the
big walk-in vault that cam e with
the building when the c ity
purchased it for historical socie·
ly use .
The structure was 11un ha,.~cl
ror $80,000 from Ora11gt' l"'.o 1~t .
Savings and Loan A>i..,1111Jli
when the bank pt•oplt• nim\·d 111
to a new building
The older s truc·tut ,. ".1
m oved from Adam.., \\ 1•11111 '"
its new location north 1 r l 1111
Park, dmrnhm n
Alt worlo.ml'n '-1'ttl1•cl th1 I •
lur e on its ne" fo11111l.1t 1 11 • I
offic iab ll·arned 1 h.11 .i. 1111.:
College radio given boo.lit
A new "booster" transmitter
is now operating at 89. l on the
FM radio dial which broadcasts
Orange County public radio sta·
lion KSBR into .Laguna Beach,
South Laguna and portions of
Corona de! Mar.
According to KS B R Chief
Engineer Stephen Van Wagoner,
installation of the equipment
a:
0 m a:
c(
:c
LI.I :c
I-
Li.
0
"' c
was completi:'d la-.1 "c"k rn
Top or lhl' Worlcl l" 1111111 •111'
Laguna
An agret•mt·nt lo1·t" t" 1
local non prnfit -.1 1111111 "h1t Ii
operated h) Saddll h.ll'h 1 ·1111 .. •1
1n M b-.ton \'1t·10 . .tr.cl II
wa::. <.·ontlt1<kd la,,1 11
ing mstallataon of tht· I 1( 11!1'
FALL
• ii I 111 ~1rfitt•r:. had misplaced
th1 0111 \ ault combination in
• 111 1 111 \, tu m o\e to new
• I , I It
IJ 11. i..11 ,,uinmonl·d were
• ''"' ,,, " 111 l ntlt'd Safe of
l 1'l1'
1o • • ho.p1,.·d their way into
.11111 throui.:h the building's
0111\ lo d1M oq•r the vault
1111111 "'as llnkt.•d to a
k111g mt><0han1sm
I' t flt• big door was
1111l111111L!111 the cloudy
1 ""'""'" 1n a boost to
f, 11111(1,Jll\ \\i.lnled the
ti Ill for i t s o wn
11111 lri..ldt'd 1l'> work on 1r1· 1 .. 1 th,• medwntsm , a c1-
11 11 11•1 .. irlt•d
I • 1 1tor1 1·ost lax payers
I 11 .111d •he· his torical socie·
. 1 .1 111111 t 1 me actuated
I 1 h I' 1111 l b \'CJU (l
HAPPY BIRTHDAY \\'oriel
fam t•d p1anbl \'lad1m1r
Jlorov:itz lt>ts out a Pl'<.11 o l
I a ughte r during h 1s ii th
birthda\ celebration 111 '.°\t'\\
York lust wct·k llornwit1.
"ill appear in u recital Nov
I at th<.• Metropolitan Opera
I l ou~<.· rn '.\:l'\\ York
SKS INC.
The Orange County Board or
Supervisor s has approved
formation of a financing agency
that will provide s treet sweep-
ing, park maintenance a nd
similar ser vices in the s prawling
Aliso VieJo development east of
Laguna Beach. ,
The county service area. as
the agency is named, will be
funded t h rough assessments
l evied agai n s t futur e
homeowner associations and
fees paid by others who benefit
from the ser vices.
Tax revenues from the ne w
development will not be used lo
s upport ser vice area activities.
County officials say tax revenue
mus t be applied lo fund other
ser vices, such as police and fire
protection, which the county has
the responsibility to provide.
STIVAL OF VALUES
z :::>
0 SECRETARY D
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JUDGE'S CHAIR
This plush judge's chair is
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A comfortable 1phut~i.~r.
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Prices start at 1u~t s399s
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" Orange Coaat DAILY PlLOT/Mondav, October 5, 1981
, .
THEJ982 -.
FAIRMONT FUTURA 4-DOOR
The only car in.America \Nith
more standard features and
a lovver sticker price than last year.*
More passenger
capacity than Citation
or Cavalier.
With its optional flight bench seat, Futura
4-:door offers more passenger room than Chevy
Citation or Cavalier. Room enough to seat six
adults.
And, even though Reliant and Aries have room
for six, Futura offers more cubic feet of trunk
spacet than either:
Plenty of miles between
fill-ups.
Ford 's sensible 2.3 liter overhead cam engine
delivers impressive fuel economy. With its J 982
EPA ratings and standard J 6-gallon fuel tank,
Futura provides an estimated range of@
miles around home or 528 estimated miles on
the highway. And for even greater range, you
may choose Futura s new optional 20-gallon
fuel tank.
@ EPA
EST
MPG
For comparison. Your mileage and range may
differ depending on speed, distance, weather:
Actual highway mileage and range lower:
teased on 1982 EPA Interior ~lume lndt'll
Many extra cost features
on Citation, Cavalier and
Reliant are standard
on Futura.
Futura's price is lower for 1982, but the list of
standard features isn 't. In fact, Futura actually
has more standard features than last year. And,
although levels of standard features may vary,
just look what Futura offers standard that the
competition doesn't.
!t'lt0/f '5 ~ ~~ ~ ~ <.r ~
DEEP-WELL Not Not Not
TRUNK Standard Avarl-Avail-Avail-
ab~ able able
STEEL-BELTED Standard Extra Extra Extra
RADIALS Cost Cost Cost
DUAL HALOGEN Standard Extra Extra Extra
HEADLAMPS Cost Cost Cost
DUAL REMOTE Standard Extra Extra Extra OUTSIDE MIRRORS Cost Cost Cost
DELUXE.TURBINE Standard Extra Extra Extra
WHEEL COVERS Cost Cost Cost
PASSENGER Sixtt Fl~ Five Six SEATING
Comparably equipped,
Futura is priced hundreds
less ** than Citation,
Cavalier or Reliant.
AJthough Futura is better equipped than last
year, it's surprisingly priced lower: In fact, when
comparably equipped, it's sticker priced over
5900 less than Chevy Citation, over 5750 less
than Cavalier, and over 5250 less than Plymouth
Reliant. The 1982 Fairmont Futura is simply more
car for less money.
Fairmont Futura 4-door.
More car. Less money.
Base price $6419 *
•Based on a ~ompanson of Aug I. I 9B I. stteker price of a I 9B I to a 1982 t>ase
model Fairmont Futura 4-door. Tu re. taxes and desuncitlon charges extra
Optional white s1clewall !Ires S66 extra
••Based on a comparison of 4-door t>ase moclel sticker prices or comparat>ly
equl~d 'l·door mocJels
FORD FAIRMONT
FUTURA
• FORD DIVISION --
LOOK OUT WORLD
HERE COMES .FORD
. •I 1 .
.-
Dally Piiat
MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1981
CAVALCADE
AT YOUR SE.RVICE
a2-3
86
Erma
teen-agers
Bombeck says
have hatched
some 'Wild notions about
human birth. See Page B2.
Model 12-meters maneuver for the start as they tack and jibe as competitively as the mi llion dcllar Twelves of America's Cup fame .
Skippers take to model sailing
Racing radio-controlled miniature 1~-meters latest yachting craze
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Of tale Deity ...... , ....
It's been said that the dif·
ference between men and boys
is the size and price of their
toys.
Model boats, for instance, are
not new. Boys have been sailing
them in the bathtub or in the
family swimming pool for years.
Latest craze among the yacht·
ing set is model 12-meter sailing
on lakes and ponds, and even in
the smooth waters of the bay.
It"s not unusual to see grown
men walking along the shore
guiding their 6-foot "yachts" by
r adio, similar to the r adio·
controlled airplane models.
By manipulating the servos on
the radio the "skippers" can put
their craft through tacks and
jibes -on the wind or off -
with the same skills as a skipper
and crew of a real 12-meter in
America's Cup competition.
The fad has attracted some
oldtime yachtsmen who feel
they are getting a little too old to
handle the wheel and haul sheets
and halyards on the big yachts.
It is also fancied by a number of
skipper s still active in the
"sport" of yachting .
Regattas are held on a regular
basis. Recently a .. national
championship" on the smooth
waters of the pond at the
William Mason Park in Irvine
attracted 18 model sailboat en·
thusiasts from as fa r away as
Oklahoma.
One of the things that appeals
to the "over the hill" sailors is
that a complete r ace over a
triangular co~rse takes from
fi ve to 20 minutes to complete -
depending on the length of the
course. The contests, complete
with race committees, are sailed
under the same rules as regular
yacht racing.
A boat fouling another or a
mark must make a 360-degree
turn before continuing in the
race.
Most of the races are run un-
der the sanction of the American
Model Yacht Association which
sets the rules for local organiza·
lions such as the highly active
Newport Beach 12-Meter As-
sociation.
Fred Schenc k , national
secretary of the association,
estimates that there are about
514 model boats active in
various fleets throughout the
country.
Some of the othe r local
yachts men who have taken up
the sport are Clary Staaf, Willis
Boyd, Swede Johnson, and Jeff
Farwell. Gene Wells, well
known yacht des igner from
Newport Beach. designed the
craft.
Sparks McClellan is the owner
of t he plug from which the
fiberglass boats are produced
and is also race director for
local regattas.
The radio controls are similar
to th e ones used in model
airplane flying and with a few
modifications can be made to
control the trim of s ails and
change the course of the boats,
according to Johnson, a veteran
sailmaker and one of the early
devotees of the sport.
The boats are strictly one-
design -meaning that they
must be alike. The six-foot boat
com plete with radio gear
weighs 38 pounds, has an 84-inch
mast with stainless steel coated
fi shing wire for rigging.
Several of the boats have tried
carbon-fiber masts, but these
were discouraged because of the
cost.
What is the cost of the adult
toys? Fully-rigged for sailing -
including the radio gear
prices range from about $550 to
$1,500, depending on whether
one builds his own boat or buys
it from a commercial builder.
There are several professional
sailmakers, including Charles
Block of San Diego; John Amen,
Petaluma, and Skip Elliott,
Newport Beach. Some of the
owners build their own sails, in·
eluding Johnson, a former pro-
fessional sailmaker with Baxter
& Cicero.
Sails for local boats are made
from 2 .2 -ounce dacron .
However, some of the boat
owners in Marblehead , Mass.
are experimenting with mylar
sails -the same materials used
on the real l~·met e r s of
America·s Cup fame.
In the national championships
at Mason Park, J ohnson of the
Orange County fl eet was the
winn er : second was Don
Prough, Argonaut Fleet. San
Diego; third was Ed Kimball,
Orange Co unty Fleet ; fourth
was Bob Baker, Helmsman
Fleet. Long Beach, and fifth was
Fred Schenck, Orange County
Fleet.
Commodore Peter Kruse of El Toro checks sail and rudder control of hi! 12-meter before launching. Skippers control yachts by radio ff'om shore.
I I
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..
0
0
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* Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 6, 1981
•ANN LANDERS I
•ERMA BOMBECK .
I • • •HOROSCOPft !
..............
BACK IN UNIFORM Actor Erik E strada
1 left l joins co-stars Bruce Jenner 1center 1
and Larry Wilcox on the :-.et of the '.'IBC
televis ion series "C HiPs " in Burbank
Es trada returned to work after settling a con-
tract dispute which ke pt him off the popular
s how for three episodes
LEASE FACTOR OM
LUXURY LEAS ES
1982 MARK VI ,
LINCOLN TOWN CAR
CONTINENTAL. CALL NOW
OFFER IS LIMITED
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Small Price.
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because our classifieds have an extra day to sell every
week. Get results with the ads that last longer., Get the
8-Day Week special classified rate. Call 642·5678 today!
For an EXTRA day, call today
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Open 8 to 5:30 Monday-Friday, 8 to noon Saturday.
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pedal na& ra&e for .... ee .. •ttdal llMn .,,.,.,
mtrcll..u.e prtttel I• .. •• fw .. er Itta. C..t r~••• IM aa1M ~r ,.., a4 llfttla a ••1• 1tUlal ll1M or jut OH. 11 .. JmH\ S U.S.
I lo •
Magnetic field a myth:
DEAR ANN LANDERs: I know you a
are in touch with the best doctors and I
lawyers and religious leaders. How about ,
jewelers? • Allll l.AllDEIS I
I spent $350 on a wrist watch for my ~\
girlfriend. It is a we ll-known bra nd name ,.
and one of the best. Well. s he was thrilled __________ ....,
with the watch. She wore it for a week and
then told me it was awfully pretty but it
didn 't keep time. It lost about two or three
hours a day. Or. it just stopped running
us ually at three or four o'clock.
I took it back to the jeweler and he
charged m e S14 to fix it. He said she must
have knocked a part loose. The watch ran
fine for three days. and then it began to act
up again. This time the jeweler told me my
girl must be one or those rare people who
has a magnetic field in her system. and no
watch will ever keep time on her wrist.
l have never heard of a magnetic field
in a person's system . Please check this out
for m e. l don't want to throw out any more
money on watch repairs if it is true.
TIME ON MY HANDS IN BRIDGEPORT
DEAR HANDS: I checked with two
authorities in an erfort to chase down the
mag ne tic field theory -both topnotch
jeweler~.
Leste r Lampe rt in Chicago said. "Thal
m yth has been around fore ver, and there b
no validity to it whatsoever. Any jewe ler
who makes such a statement b trying to
cqver up incompe tence in his rep~ir d e·
pa rtment. In all the year~ I have been in
the business I have never seen a person
who has this so-called magnetic fi eld."
Ron Brodkey in Omaha, !'leb., gave the
following r esponse: "I have me t people
who have magnetic pe rsonalities, but
nothing e lse about them has e noug h
magnetism to cause a watch to lose time.
However, individuals who work around
powe rrul magnetic equipment, s uch as
powe r planb or laboratories where X-ray
equipment or laser b eams are used, ma~·
have trouble with their timepiece~. If this
proble m arises, it can almost always be
eliminated by switching to a quartz, elec·
tric batte r y-operated timepiece. They ar
not arrected by magnetic equipme nt." 1
DEAR A!'JN LANDERS. Our daughtJ
is 24 years old. a beautiful girl and a st'J'
d e nt nurse. She met this fellow sevep
months ago. He has a good job Jtnd ar.
aparlm(•nt and wants someone to pay hatf
the r ent. "Linda " decided she would mO\f'
in with him. Sht• c laims she will also sa~t>
mone~ .
We have given her every argument Wl'
can think of to no avail It won't save
her am mone\. a~ s hC' claims. because it
would bt• chca'pe r to live in the dorm. Sht•
has onl~ three month~ left be fore g radua
lion .. Ju~t when s he could start a wonderrul
career of s er\'ice and dignity. s he wants to
do th1:. ... tupid thing ·
It •~ tearing her father and mt• apart
a nd :.l'ltmg a poor example for her ~·ou nger
~ister
An~ hC'lp ~·ou can offer Linda would bt•
gn•a tl ~ appn•ciated L.J I ~ ~EW
YORK
DEAR L.I.: Linda didn't write me -
you did. so the ad vice is for you.
The "girl" is a 24-year -old woman. H
this b the way 'he c hooses to conduct her
lire. accept it. I agree it is a very dumb
move. Her re putation will be badly
d a m aged and I predict -ba~ed on the
mail I receive -that 'he will regret it. But
som e people mus t learn the hard way -so
le t Linda get he r lump~.
Do yQu feel awkward , self-conscious -lonely?
Welcome to the club. There's help for you in Ann
Landers' booklet. "The Key to Populanty " Send SO
cents wtth your request and a long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope to Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago. Ill 60611
Birth daze replayed
Supposedly, we are living a m o ng
children who know more a bout sex educa·
tion than any other gene ration.
Hogwash.
If you believe that. you'll believe that
Cathy Rigby invented puberty.
THANKS TO television. I believe we
have produced the most confused genera·
lion regarding conception a nd birth who
ever lived.
Take conception. Please. The odds of
becoming pregnant are slim -possibly a
few hours a month. Yet. I have never seen
a n unwed teen-ager on television who did
not end up with c hild a fter he r one mistake
with a sailor just passing through whom
s he will never see again.
Ask your basic young person how long
you have to carry a child and the answers
will be varied.
ON THE AFTERNOON soaps , a child
can be born within six weeks after concep-
tion and be married before the year is up.
Jr it is a long-running series, it could take
up to three months fo r full term. However.
in a three-part mini-series last year three
births occurred. including twins who were
born three weeks apart when they were
pre-empted by a baseball playoff.
flMA IOM)fCK
AT WIT'S END
Young people don't know what to
be lieve. Eggs don't produce babies. they
hatc h panty hose. Wo m en don't ca rry
babies where they'r e supposed to The~·
have Jordache pregnancies.
Love is n't a reason to have a baby.
s agging ratings are. And heaven help the
wom en of this generation who have a baby
and expect to wear a bikini home from the
hos pital
MORE IMPORTANT, televis ion treats
a birth as ordinary It's sorta like driving a
car everyone does it so how much of a
big deal can it be. when in truth it's quite
miraculous and will never be equalled in
the impact it will m ake on your life.
To further screw up the thinking or
young people. Mork a nd Mindy will have a
child this season in which Mork will give
birth and. according to tradition on his
planet. the baby will be born old and grow
youn ger as it matures. You wanta explain
that to your teen -ager·1
•
'Dad' Mickey's • voice
Q : When Mickey Mouse went on radio.
who was the voice of Mickey?
A: His father -Walt Disney himself!
Q: Any idea of bow large a radio and
TV audience the late beloved Archbishop
Fulton J. Sheen bad at bis peak?
A: A "gu esstimate" was 30 million ,
programmed timewise against the reign -
ing, innovative and "unbeatable" king of
TV. Milton Berle. When Berle heard that
"Uncle Fultie" had won the .Emmy that
season <1952), "Uncle Miltie" graciously
nodded and said, "Naturally, he had bette r
w riters -Matthe w , Mark, Luke a nd
John!"
Q : Is it fact or ficdon that Mickey
Spillane, who authored a slew of the most
viol e n t cops ·a n d-robbers books, then
switched into penning child ren's non·
violent ad ventures which me& with such a
warm reception that Bantam has another
half ·dozen In the same gentle genre ready
for release?
A : It's fact -but Spillane hasn't
"switched." He's kept quiet custody of his
favorite Mike Hammer gang·busting
characters! -
Q: Wllat does .. Stall" ol Fame Jockey
cl1amplDB Eddie Arcaro remember WH the
most dlftlealt haxary be laad to alMlorb after
be retired!
A : •'Sleeping late every morning and
•goin1 to bed wearinJ ~Ilk pajamas." (Wbldl reprilel the oldert vaudeville Joke
in our camphor-scented rues, uttered by
eit~er George Bu ms, Billy Qlea1011, Henny
Youngman or some other veteran
Pf ISONAllTY Q.&A.
BY MARILYN AND HY GARONER
vaudevillian who'll · claim this when they
read it: ··1 didn't know what oatmeal was
until 1was60 years old!'')
Q: Who said: "I have wondered at
times what the Ten Commandments would
have looked like bad Moses run t hem
through a state legislature"?
A: He was a governor of California
named Ronald Reagan !
Q: Why didn't P hyllis Diller's nude
photo ever appear ln Playboy?
A: "Because," she told us , "they heard
I once approached Popular Mechanics to
be a centerfold, but they also turned me
down!"
Q: My husband ls a baseball buff and
he insists t hat Fidel Castro was a left.
handed pitcher while at Havana Unlversl·
ty . Also that Ile tried o a t for the
Washington Senators basebalJ team, but
was tUJ"Ded down. Is any or this true? -
Mrs. Walter O'K., Pittsburgh.
A: Yes . All of it!
Send JIOUT question! to HJI Gordner core of
thu newspaper~ P.O. Boz 19820, '"""'· Cali/. 92714. MarilJlft and HJI OGrdner wal C11111oer cu
mon11 qwrttona cia they can m rhttr colllmft, but
tM volume o/ mall make,. peraonol r~ca im·
possCblt. • ·'
'
I ~
I I
... -__ .,, ____ .
......
By PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna8each
~IOS
"I thought you two had split."
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Leo: Review,
revise ideal
Tuesday. October 6
ARIES 1 Mar('h 21 Apnl 19 1 Yol.l are
ready to e m bark upon fre:-,h paths.
especially where career e nters picture
Emphasis on added recognition . more
responsibility and part1c1pation an eom·
munit~· and political affair:-.
TAl'Rl'S 1 April 20 :\1<.I~ 201 Good
moon aspect eoinc1de:-. with 1ourne~.
:.piritual illumination. tht' o\'ercomin_g of
dbtancc. languagt· barrier:-.
GEMl~I t :Vfo,· 21 J unl' 20 1 You rt'
cO\'er from n.'C'ent· los:-. ,·ou·n· <.thll' now
to consolidatl•. to regroup· a nd to .. n·(·ap·
t ure · · confidence of friends. supporters.
C'A~C'E R r .June 21 ·.July 22 1 Lca\'e 1m ·
portant details for an other time. For now.
pl'rcei\'c pote ntial. see picture us a whole
and enlarg(• pl'r:-,onal horizon!'>
LEO t .1111~ 23 Aug 221 You ·11 he u!->ke<f
Lo n·,·iew. rC\'l!->l' ancl n •:-,tructun· basic
con C'l'ph lla\'(' reference material <1t
hand Check :.ource:-,.
\'IRGO <Aug 23-Sept 22' You un·
dergo period of lran:-.1t1on Don't re:.ist
C'han~e. Ctllizt• power ... of pcr:-.uusaon \'our
abilitY to anal\·w <.'haral'tl•r :-.urgl•:-. to
forcfront ·
LIBRA 1 Sl'pt 23 Oct 22 1 '.\1one~ or
gift comes from :.urpri:-.t• sourct• F;n·or as
repaid in g rand mannt•r
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 '.'lio\ 211 If :-.elt'C'
ti\·t'. ~·ou avoid C'Onfu:.ion If ~·ou altl'mpt to
clo C\'cr~·t hin g <1t om·c. ~·ou im·itc delC1.'.
loss and theft
Sr\GITfARll'S 1 :'>lo\' 22 Dec 211 .\e
C'ent on mont·~. authority . p0we r .
responsibility a nd \'ind icC1tion nf ,·iews.
Re lations hip intensifi<.•s ~ou learn where
you stand and prcst i~<.' ... wing:-. ui,rn ards.
• CAPRICOR~ 1 Dec 22-Jan. 19 ' · You
gain added recognition You are released
from obligation whi<.'h wa:-foolish. ex
pen!'> in• and not ~our own to carr~· in fir:-1
place
AQUARll'S 1J an 20-Fcb 18 1 What
~·ou have been :-.ecking 1:-. clo:-,e ~ou makl'
\'ita l disco\'ery. Thi!'> could m<.irk personal
age of enlightenment '.'IC\\ con tact proves
valuable. Leo and a nother Aquarian figure
pro minentl y Privileged information is
made available
PISCES (Feb. 19·:\it arch 201 Emotion~
te nd to dominate logic. Draw lin e . pl'rmit
room for reasonable attitude. Wi sh will be
fulfilled . Family m e mber brings good
n ews. In itia l discouragl'ment i-.
transformed into elation
-
STAii Df UIUllf
AROUND THE WORLD
City sound
lingers on
SAN FRANCISCO A foggy morning
in the cool. gray city of love. City noises
are different from the suburbs . It took
som e time in the country not to hear the
garbage people rattling the cans But I did
it.
In m y apartment -office the building
ele\'ator grind~. A:-. it reaches the floor. it
g ives a wailing gasp. T he e levator is
busiest in early morning. Al shut-eye time.
On the suburban highways we could
hear the faraway rise and fall of the police
siren. l woke briefly and fell back asleep.
C'o nfident that law and orcler were on the
roads
HER E THERE ARE ~O highways . A
-;ire n is rare But mv window 1:-. over the
gurages. The engines· -,tarting in the morn-
ing ar e ferociow;.
I go to the country weekends to hear
the customary howl of the nighttime tom·
C'a t.
A pleasunl sound here· Tht' morning
bells of Sts Pl•ter and Paul ·s
Somebody made a survl'y of the pro
fcssions und their worth to the public. Doc··
tors came up \vei l. La w~·ers didn't
"CONFI DENCE AND belil'f tn the
medical profcs:-,ion hus alway!. been high.
but our sur\'e\ :-.how:. it ha!-> increased.··
Tht• '>Ur\'(·~· !.how:. the public doesn't
ha \'e muC'h conf1d(•nce m the law\'er But the~· don't ha\'e much in new-,pape.r colum-
nist s either . :.o I'm not JU:-.t knocking the
legal eagle!-> Fair pl1:1~· all around
A~ a :.ideline lhe ~un·e, looked mto
how well the profe:-.:-.ional ages. People do-
ing badl~ are dentist:-, Law~·ers do OK
~l'\\:.paper people onl~· SO·!)O
Teacht•rs lin.• the longest 1 Survl'~·
didn 't show ho'' muC'h l'Onficlence we ha\'e
in them. 1
Poet:. li\'l' ·the :.hortcst Ii \'es. Rhyming
lukes <.l lot out of you T each poetry. man
Do n ·l write it
THE Pl'BUC HAS LOTS of C'onfidence
1n winemake rs . Th is 1~ something new in
the !>Latus bus in e:-.s . Winemaking used to be
something ~orth Heuch Italians did in the
basement
There were places like Beringer a nd
~t onda\'I and othl'r:-. of t he old families. but
it wasn't u :-oc1et \' trade
'.'io\\ \H' have the new little wineries in
the :'°':apa :.ind Sonom:.i valleys. Owned hy
people who h<1ve all lhl' credentia ls lo
m ake the SOC'1a l C'olumns. There are
weekend wine tastings along with slather:.
of imported pate de foie grlf:-
All with coO\·ersation!. ·Ha:. a good
nose .. 1Thc wine has u ·good no!'le. ·· not
you. And don't :-,pi t it out on the floor e\'en
if you did learn the custom in Bordeaux. 1
IT'S THE NEWEST thing in parlor
games to ''-ljlV down wine ... I'd been doing
th<1t for ~·~vs on T elegraph llill. Bought
half-gallon ,1dg~ of red wine. took it home
and laid it down. Ht•c·auM~ it \Vas heav~·.
l hat· s wh \'
T he \,·mt• wt· "la~· in·· now is from
thc:.e sme1ll. social \'incvard:-. You don't
pop a cork on I hes~ for three ~·car:-.. Then
you pour it at dinner and tell the g uests. "I
laid thi:-. 111 three ~·ear:-. ago. Had a hunch
the v intage was going lo mature well. ..
While vou sav this. swirl the wine
uround in the glas; Keep a scientific look
on your face llold the glass by the bottom
~ot by the ste m . Only clods do that. Look
at the color and Sa\·. ··Brilliant. .. 'You an•.
man. ~en•r m ind t·he '' ine. 1
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
TO BE SURE
Or WINNING,
INVENT
YOUR OWN
GAME,
ANO ~EVER TELL
A"'"< OTMER PLAYER
J..1:iB6"-~ T ME RULES
Patient too patient
DEAR DOCTOR : I have severe
me nstrual cramps . Have bad the m for
years. But m y f am Uy doctor bas never pre-
s cribed anything for them. He malntains
that it's bad to treat cramps because they
are natural; that women should learn to
bear them phUosophlcaUy. He sa ys ma11y
women. like m yself co.tnplaln because of
psychologtcal reason1t that exaggerate the
pains.
I am W1'1tlng for your opinion. All I
have taken on m y own are three or four
aspirins a day, which seem to help -but
only a little. What do .you suggest? -MISS
0 .
DEAR MISS 0 .: Firs t. a cons ultation
or actual change of doctors. We 're sur -
prised you've bee n patient so long and ac-
cepted a passive type of treatment rather
t han an active attack on your problem.
· Aspirin. as in your case, has often
brought some measure of relief -but
US\,\ally not enough. Exercises before the
expected period lometimes help.
But what we believe is quite important
T rou1 HfAlrH
DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN
is limiting salt intake in the week preced·
ing your expected period. 1t reduces s well·
1 ing in the tissues and relieves tension.
In addition, there are medicines that
often bring great relief . For example, ask
your doctor about mefenamic a~id , which
is obtained by prescription . Some women
who decide to use contraceptive pills find
th at they have a dramatic effect on
cramps.
FOR MRS. T.: Yoar friend ha.i ae>l ex·
aggerated. Recent 1tudies IBdlClte that
when expoeed &o blgller thaa normal noise
levels, a perlOll'I btood pre.tare will rite
and cbolelterol le•el1 lllc~ue. Ota•1e of
job may help bring down your pre1sare,
Mrs.T .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981 •1
HYATT REOPENS Two men stand on new
second-floor walkway above the lobby of
Kansas City·:-, Hyatt Regency Hotel a fter it
reopened last week. Hotel has been closed
..........
s ince Julv 17 \\•hen t wo of three catwalks
s panning ·lobby crashed onto a dance floor
killing 113 people
Pilot advertising is
good business for
American State Bank.
"Dally Pilot help wanted
ads have consistently
brought us the best
personnel."
L··cllle Kuehn
Community Relations,
American State Bank
Newport Beach
Linda Quanstrom says
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HUNTINGTON SCH.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
19029 Beecn BM!. 1c.om. ol llMdl & T ..,.,,,
842-3400
SANTA ANA
TUSTIN
3500 S Bris10I Suite 20 t (Bnn:iAI~
tn ,_ CoMI a... 1111'9 I
545-7123
ORANGE ANAHEIM
: VILLA PARK FULLERTON
t 1173 N. Euclid
GARDEN GROVE
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12062 Velley View S Cel Cir (Cot.wdVl///ley~&~)
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.·-. : .. : \ .... ·. ' r. •• ' ...
• •• .J ·-~
NEWPORT
STATIONERS
lllt tll I If t l'Hlllll t I l'I tll'I t
Ol'bltelt Safe
1981
For your convenience. call tn your order
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3M
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. • 114 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Ootobet 5, 1981. ... .
Wood wanns Vermonters
Rising oil prices drive Yankees to nature's fuel
MONTPELIER, Vt. <AP> -
Daya are shorter. Nlghta are
nippier. And the woodpiles ln
Vermont are growtnc taller.
The rising costs ol oil and eu.
and rears about their scarcity
and environmental ertects, have
Vermonters literally looking in
thei r backyards ror what's
become the state's most popular
beating ruel -wood.
A state Plannlog Office survey
shows that 56 percent or all state
households use wood as either a
main Cuel or a backup. Just
three years ago, the figure was
22 per cent, and oil dominated
the home beating scene. Only 39
percent or households now use
oil as a main fuel, compared to
59 percent in 1978.
But you don't need to look at
bureaucratic studies to figure
tha t out.
An early morning walk down
most Vermont roads will fill
your nostrils with the pungent
smell of woodsmoke. Peeks into
many homes -from that of the
most humble Carmer to that or
Gov. Ric ba rd Snelling -will
show working fire places and
woodsloves.
Other telltale signs are surg-ing sales in woodsloves and the
comeback of the c h imney
sweep.
The Wood Heating Alliance, a
private trade orga01zat1on in
Chicago, reports 1.2 million
woodstoves were sold in 1979,
compared to 200,000 sold six
years earlier.
them," said Norman Hudson, a
wood energy specialist in the
state Energy Offi ce.
Indeed , lbe s l a te has de·
veloped a program whereby peo-·
ple can chop their heating wood
on. state land, paying just S6 a
cord, Hudson said.
Because of the chopping and
splitting work involved, buying
wood directly rrom private IOI·
gers -who chop, split and de·
Liver -is the easiest way lo
build up the home woodpile.
It's not just the toasty feeling
of coming home to a cr ackling
An early morn-
ing walk down
most Vermont
roads will fill
your nostrils with
the pungent smell
of woodsmoke.
fire that's driving Vermonters to
wood heat -it 's the money they
save.
It costs anywhere from $65 to
$90 to buy a cord of wood -a
st ack of four-foot logs measur-
ing eight feet long by four feet
high -with the average home
needing about six or seven cords
per year. Add the cost of the
woods tove or wood-burning
furnace, ranging from several
hundred dollars to several
thousand dollars, and throw in
a bout $40 for each time the
chimney is cleaned.
$2,000 a year, Hudaon HY• It's a
wonder all Vermontera don't
heat with wood.
Other chimneys lo Vermont
are also puffing woodamoke.
The Energy Office reporta In·
dustrlal and commercial UH of
wood for heat la on the rise.
In Montpe lier, a publicly
owned city garage recently con-
verted from oil lo a system that
burns wood pellets. Public
Works Director Stephen Gray
estimates that move will cut the
garage's heating costs in half.
About 40 miles away, the Burl-
ington Electric Department has
won approval to build a SO·
megawatt wood-fired electric
generating plant, which officials
believe will be the largest such
plant in the country. The plant
would cons ume a staggering
1,500 tons of wood each day.
Private companies are follow-
ing suit.
The Ethan Allen Inc. furniture
plant in Beecher Falls and the
Gilman Pa per Co. are among
those that have converted lo all-
wood beating systems.
Some environmentalists worry
a bout possible pollution from
eve r g r o wing c l o ud s of
woodsmoke. The state has been
studying the effects of wood-
burning on the air in Waterbury
for two years . No results are in,
but Hudson said other studies in-
dic ate woods moke contains
nothing h a rmful to human
health.
A growing woodpile at a Montpelier supply store awaits Vermont residents getting ready for wmter. The
use of wood for fuel is increasing every year in the forested state.
And last winter, Americans
burned between 30 million and
40 million cords of wood to heat
their homes, compared to about
half that amount in 1970, said
D ia n e O 'Co nn o r , a
s po keswo ma n fo r the U.S.
Forest Service.
"Eighty-three percent of Ver-
mont is forested. We've got a lot
of trees and we should use
Wi th the stove a one-time
purchase and the cost of heating
a n aver a ge ho me with oil
sometimes running as high as
Now, with winter coming on. a
.. wood craze" seems to have
com e over Vermonters. Talk on
the street is or weekends spent
stacking woodpiles. Even in the
governor's office, where talk
usually centers on more press·
ing matters, aides say Snelling
has been asking his staff. where
he can find the best buys on
wood .
Transcendental Meditation®
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Ushering In The
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In This Generation
DIVORCED?
Time Alone does not heal all the wounds.
DIVORCE RECOVERY Y«JRKSHOP
Help, Support and Guidance for any divorced
or separated person.
Six Tuesday Evenings
Oct. 6 -Nov. 10 -7:30·9:30
' St. Andrews Presbyterian Church
Newport Beach
St Andrews Road al 15th St .
Across From Newport Harbor High
$15.00 Registration
For mor• information call:
631-2880
9:00-5:00 Mon..fri.
TELEVISIONS
MOVIES
*MOVIES*
OVER 1000 TO RENT
All LA1UT MLEAIEI
•BLANK TAPE •11•
•ACCESSORIES VARIETY
..
•
Tuesday, October 6 is
Share-A-Ride Day in
Orange County. And to
help do our part to sup-
port this day, OCTD is offering
a free ride on the bus. Just
pay full fare one way, and your
return trip will cost nothing!
Three 1DOre ways
to Share-A-Ride.
Along with our main
'----~~~ .... bus service, Ridesharing
also includes the Express
bus, carpooling, and Neighbor-
hood Dial-A-Ride.
When you board the ___________ .-..=..__ _______ '""" The Express bus provides
limited-stop service for conve-
nient transportation to most
employment centers through-
out Orange County. There
bus, you'll also receive ~
discount coupons worth _..:
several dollars. These =
coupons save you ~lr::~~~~~~~::?::~~~~~~~~~~,:i:l
money at such Orange -JWJ~~---4--+-+-------------4.a""tiirt'-=:1 are also buses to serve local
residents who work in County places as Jack-
In-The-Box, Lion =--· Country Safari, and __.-~-
Knott's Berry Farm.
So your particiP.ation will be
worth your while in a number
of ways.
Clear tbe air.
The main reason behind
Share-A-Ride Day, though, is to
let everyone know the advan-
tages of Ridesharing. We must do
someth~; projections show that
if we in Orange County don't
make some changes, your trip to
work will take you twice as long
in 5 years. That's why the Coali-
tion for Clean Air and OCTD,
along with major Oran~e Co~ty
employers, are sponsormg this
Ridesharing day. We want you to
understand just how economical
Ridesharing can be for you; how
it reduces traffic congestion, air
pollution, and fuel consumption . .
Los Angeles.
'lb help take the work
out of getting to work,
OCTD offers Vanpool and
Carpool matching services. Using We've got you covered. our computer, we can provide
The bus is Ridesharing at its instant carpool matching infor-
best. You can get anywhere in mation to individuals over the
Orange County on the bus for no telephone.
more than 75¢. And the bus is For short neighborhood trips
convenient too. With over 6,000 in specific zones, try our
bus stops, 75% of the Orange Dial-A-Ride Service. This is a
County population lives within curb-to-curb, shared-ride service
3 blocks of a stop. _........... of mini-buses that trans-
We've also got a net-port you to any point in the
work of 56 different routes rone at your request. If
that completely cover your schedule is flexible,
Orange County. These Dial-A-Ride may be for you.
routes were carefully So do your share for
planned to meet your spe-clean air, and join our Hon·
cific employment, school, orary Chairman, Buddy
aad neighborhood needs. Budd Ebsen Ebsen, as we all take the
Y bus or some other form of
Ridesharing this Tuesday. Call
636-RIDE for information.
Share-A-Ride Day, TueSclay, Oct. 6 •
J
.. ,
.. GETS OK -Former
F lorida Gov e rnor
Reubin Askew has
been given approval
by the Federal Elec·
lion Commiss ion to
raise money, hire
, consultants . and
.. travel a s a non -
candidate to decide
whether to make a
1984 presidential bid.
TV series
• : site to
·~be park
AGOURA (AP) -The
National Park Service
• has agreed to purchase
1,810 acres north of
Agoura in the Santa
Monica Mountains
familiar to television
' viewers as the site of the
·· 1960s TV series ·'The
·: Big Valley."
· The land is designated
to serve as one or eight
major activity centers
, in the planned Santa
' Monica Mountains Na-
tional Recreation Area,
with trails for hiking
and horseback riding.
The purchase will also
provide the opportunity
for the connection of the
Santa Monica Mountains
park master plan with
the Pacific Crest trail
system, which extends
from Baja to California.
The purchase agree-
ment, the first acquisi-
tion of parkland in the
Santa Monica Mountains
since Interior Secretary
James G. Watt lifted a
moratorium last June,
wa s announced by
Robert S . Chandler.
s uperintendent of the
Santa Monica Mountains
National Recreation
Area.
Chandler would not
immediately disclose
the purchase price but
said it would be "sub·
stantially below the ap-
praised value," with a
savings to the park
s ervice of "over $2
million." He said the
price would be an-
nounced when escrow
closes in 45 days.
The property ls local·
ed in Cheesboro Can:
yon .. just north of the
Ventura Freeway
between Las Virgenes
and Kanan roads.
The purchase will prob·
ably use up most -but
not ·all -· of the $6.1
million allocated by
Congress for purchase of
lands this year for the
Santa Moni ca Mountains
proposal. It will bring
the total bought to S,473
acres of a planned
150,000 acres.
Originally, $20 million
was allocated for
purchases for the Santa
Monica Mountains park,
but that was reduced to
$6 .l million by Watt.
Auto & Homeownttrs" . i}::• Quotes By Phone 1 • f...S--..,
54 .. HM ., IJl-J07 ,,,4...,...e ...........
,,
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981
College chief blasts Moral Majority
••
1 1\pa&s .. NBC tes~ ....
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Geor1etown
Unlveralty President Tlmolby S. Healy.
attacldn1 the Moral Majority and the
policies of the Reaaan adminlatratlon.
aaya a ''bout or meanneas" la ''1ourln1"
American aoclety. .
"America la in a rancorous mood
these days ... These moods have found
dlUerenl names: Nativlam, Know-
Notbinilsm, America Flrat, the Ku
Klux Kfan, McCarthyism. Now we have
the new ri1hteousnesa and its prophet,
the Moral Majority," declared Healy, a
Jesuit priest.
the District or Columbia.
Healy aald the Moral Majority,
beaded by Protestant evanaelllt Jerry
Falwell, atandl "•1aln1t rather than
for; it revels ln a rhetoric of condemna-
tion; its master work ls political as·
aasslnation. "Ultlmatel)', ln thla republic, there
are the seed.a of its death. The Calmeas
of the American people will brin1 It
down," Healy said.
America ls now 1bowln1 abroad" and
the ''bitter set of new national priorities
that put.a military hardware above the
promises we made to the old, pulls
children out of school lunches."
Falwell called Healy's remarks
''simply another uninformed attack on
a political organization that ls com·
milled to pro-moral and traditional
family values in America. namely Moral Majority."
SAN FRANCISCO.
(AP) -Eleveo •• Paclrlc Ga1 and El~c
Co. employees have
pa11ed tes .. ror nuol"r
power plant operator
licenses.
The teats are ad·
mlnllte-red by tile
Nuclear Reaulalory
Commlsaion.
"Its voice ia the voice of hatred," be
said at a convocation marking comple-
tion or a campus for the University of
He also criticized President Reagan's
budget cuts and foreign policy, saying,
"ln our baste to balance the bud1et, we
seem to ride roughshod over the human
considerations."
Healy condemned ''the face that
''Apparently Reverend Healy was in·
spired to make bla attack after seeing
the headllnes obtained by Yale Presi-
dent (A. Bartlett> Giamatti who made
similar statements a few weeks ago,"
Falwell said .
ANSWERS CRITICISM
Jerry Falwell
El1bt senior operators
and eight operators ,,m
be required at the
Diablo Canyon nuclear
plant.
I
,
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/M onday, October 6, 1981
~------------..P
DE.All PAT DUNN: I ordered a pair of
.. 1aoe1 Mardi' 1% from pencer Glfta of Allan·
Uc Clly, N.J . My baak card accoa.at wu
e .. artecl •u .15 and Ute aboea eventually ar·
rlved . Tbey didn't flt ao I returned tbem by
J aaured mall. I received a notice April 11 aay·
las m y bank card accou t would be credUed,
)•t lt wasn't. I wrote about tbla aad received
aaotber nodce In JuJy tbat my account would
be credited. I'm 1Ull waiting and hope you
caa help.
High doses of many chemicals are
poisonous, but they do not aenerally cause
tumors. There might be other effects or lOX·
iclty, such as loss of hair or weight, various
organ malfunctions, or even death, but not
cancer. To learn more about this subject , or-
der a free Department of Health and Human
Services booklet, "Everything Doesn 't Cause
Cancer," by writing to Consumer lnforma·
lion Center, Dept. 580J, Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
A.W., C.O.ta Meaa Arlington burials A YS contacted Spencer Gifts and its
customer service department promises im·
mediate action on crediting your bank card
account. The spokeswoman for the mail·
order Cirm noted that it usually takes at least
two months for a credit to s how up on a bank
statement after it is issued by Spencer.
DEAR PAT DUNN: My husband ls a
veteran. He has told me that when he dies he
wants to be buried In ArliDgton National
Cemetery. Are all veterans eligible for this?
P .R., Costa Mesa
Cancer causes listed
DEAR PAT DUNN: Sometimes it seems
like almost everything you eat, drink or
breathe causes cancer. Has It been de·
termlned exactly bow many agents do cause
cancer, and whether hlgb doses or any
chemical couJd cause this disease?
This cemetery is under the jurisdiction of
the Department or the Army, and burfal is
limited to s pecifi c categories of military
personnel and veterans, except in the case of
cremated remains to be placed in the colum·
barium For details, write lo the Superinten·
dent, Arlington National Cemetery. Ari·
ington, Va . 22211.
H.R., Costa Mesa
Scientists have identified about 30 agents
that cause cancer in humans. Cancer doesn't
usually appear until five to 40 years after ex·
posure. Cancers of the liver, lung or bladder,
for example, may not show up until 30 years
after a person is exposed to vinyl chloride,
asbestos or benzidine. Most human cancers
probably are caused in part by the environ-
ment, from man-made and natural chemicals
round in the air. water, food and the
workplace.
• Got o problem·' Then u nle ro Pat
Dunn Pat will cul red tape. getting
)t l the answers and acrum you need to
sol ue inequities m ynt'ernment and
• business Mml your 'c1uestwns to Pat
Dunn. Al Your Servtn' ()range Coast
{)a1/1J /'1101 P.O 11oz 1560. Cosio Me~a CA 92626 As
many letters as possible will he ansu.>(•red hut phonNf
inquines or lelters not including the rt•ader's full
11a111e nddre.~s and husiness hours phone number
co11nol he consutered This culumn appears daily l'r
cepl Sundal/·' ·
LOOK WHO 'S COMING TO uc~IVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA.
IRVINE
POLITICS OF POWER
Pow er of Secrecy ... William Colby
Former Director of the CIA
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 8 p.m .
Science Lecture Hall
Ticket information: 833-6379
Power of t he J udiciary ... Shirley Hufsted ler
Former Secretary of Education
Wed. Oct. 7, 8 p.m.
F110 Medical Science Lecture Hall '
No admission charge. Call 833-6379
for complimentary tickets.
Power Among Nations ... Eldon Griffiths, M .P.
Member of Parliament
Thurs., Oct. 8, 8 p.m.
Science Lecture-Hall
Ticket informa1ion: 833-6379
ISUNDAY' OCT. 111 I PREVIEW 11:00 A.M. -1:.00 P.M .• AUCTION STARTS AT 1:00 P.M. I
I NEWPORT BEACH MARRIOTT HOTEL 1 I 900 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH I
I OYER 300 ITEMS I
·I WILL BE SOLD AT I I NO MINIMUM ... NO RESERVE I
I ~teE::a:: ::y~e0~::::~d:ounted with DIAMONDS and I I other PRECIOUS GEMS. I
I • Antique GUNS, SWORDS AND MILITARY I I MEMORABILIA. I
I • African carvings and primitives. • BRONZES. I
I • Fine quality Sporting Arms such as: PARKER , I
I WINCHESTER, BROWNING, CHURCHILL and I
many others. ' I Various collectibles of almost every I I type will .,. sold WITHOUT RESERVE ! I
I PREYIEW-11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Sun., Oct. 11th I
I SALE BEGINS AT 1 p.m., Sun., Oct. 11th •
LFor ........ IRfonwotloe Cal ...................... '714) '72·4926 I
ProMecl by LITTU JOHN'S AMT19UI AIMS, IMC. ______________ ..
A lcohol .
a buse
genetic?
LA J OLLA tAP > -
Children whose parents
are alcoholic have a four
times greater chance or
becoming alcoholic than
children of non-alcoholic
couples, a UC San Diego
professor says.
"Studies done in the
United States and
Europe i ndicate
c hildre n of alcoholic
parent:. are a 20 percent
risk for alcoholism by
their early 30s. even if
they are separated from
their parents near
birth," said Dr. Marc
Sc hukit. "By com -
pari so n. adopted
children of non-alcoholic
parents are only a 5 per-
cent alcoholism risk."
Speaki n g at an
alcoholism symposium
at Scripps Memorial
Hospital, Srhukit said a
pilot study or 200 male
UCSD s tudents s ince
1978 does not provide
conclusive evidence that
altoholism is a genetic
-
Results of crime against the elderly
1.The most common response of ol
dcrly burglary vic11ms was a reluc·
lance to leave home with a
heightened fear ol remaining alone
1n 11 Some suttered acute anxiety
2.Elderly v1ct1ms of burglary almost
without exception. displayed a !Ong·
fasting tear from a sense of in·
vas1on and threat
3.Cnminal 1nvas1on of the home. re-
gardless of outcome or loss. usually
assumed larger dimensions 1n the
v1cflrn s mind than a cnme or accl·
dent that occurred elsewhere
4.Nearly 40 per cent of the total
burglary and robbery v1ct1ms did not
go places nor engage 1n certain
acflv111es due to a fear of cnme
S.S11ghlly over 12 per cent moved
from theu homes or sold business
es. c11mg the burglary and general
threat of crime in the neighborhood
as the reasons.
6.About 10 per cent of robbery v1ct1ms
changed their work schedules and
some abandoned employment as a
re!>ult ot the robbery
Cn.cA90 l•.o..•ie Ci••p11<
So..•eot ~·• SI* al CommrtH on "9"'11 -on•
su""•'r o• ltW:IV'''f tume '\'1'"" '" .Y~i Citt ~ C•'' l
Ct.1n"''v.1"•'n
SOURCE Senate Special Committct• on Aging : lrnsed on a sur vey
of e lderly C"rime victims in Kansas Cit~· by Carl L. Cunningham .
disc ase. llo wev e r . it .-------------------------------,
calls for future studies.
Schukit said chances a
man will become
alcoholic increases with
th e number of close
relatives who are
For complete ad copy and art services
advertisers all along the Orange Coast
alcoholic.
rely on Daily Pilai
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are created equal.
We know it doesn't sound that way Not when you read
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-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 6, 1981
NEWPoAT TAKES SECOND -Explorer Scout Pat Williams
and Newport Beach Police Chief Pete Gross hold up
trophy scouts won recently in national competition !n
Columbus, Ohio. The Newport scouts took second place 10
settling domestic crisis situations where the scouts· skills
...............
were tested in handling family quarrels. Shown from left
are. Don Russel, Nancy Russel. Chief Gross. Williams,
Bryan Cawthon and .'.'lewport officer Stan Bressler. adviser ·for the scouts .
High desert solar plant faces cash woe
DAGGETT (AP> -Solar One,
the world's largest sun-powered
generating station, may not be
able to begin operations unless
an extra $3 million can be found
to cover cost overrun s, a
Department of Energy official
said.
The federal Department of
Energy is also worried that
another $3 million will be un-
a v a i I able for annual main·
tenance of the 10-megawatt ex·
perimental facility. which is 80
percent completed, said Dick
Schweinberg, Solar One project
manager for the DOE.
The DOE and Southern
California Edison Co., which has
supplied money and manpower
for the plant, are looking for ex·
tra funds but both are faced With
tight budgets this year.
Schweinberg said $117 million
has been budgeted by the
federal government for the
project but said another $3
mlllion is needed.
"We need to have the money
by the end of October. Otherwise
it will throw off our December
or January timeframe for
startup of the plant,·• he said.
Schweinber said most or the
overruns came from price in·
creases in heliostats, the 1,818
mirrors which reflect sunlight
onto a water-filled receiving
tower. The tower heats waler to
produce steam. which then turns
the turbines.
Although Schweinberg is op·
timistic that this latest financial
difficulty will be overcome, he
said there is also a problem with
finding money for the annual
maintenance and testing.
Housing
n eed M esa
m eet topic
The second of three 'public
hearings to determine the moet
urgent housing and community
development needs in Costa
Mesa is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.,
Oct. 13.
Also to be considered durtn1
the series of hearinis is what
should be done with abou t
$900,000 in federal housing and
development grants.
The hearing is sponsored by
the city's fl.ousing and Com·
munity Development Commit-
tee, an advisory group, in the Ci·
ty Council chambers, 77 Fair
Drive.
Since 1975, Costa Mesa has re·
ceived federal housing and de-
velopment grants totaling near·
ly $5.5 million.
The money bas been used to
finance programs such as the
75-unit Casa Bella senior citizens
housing project , the recently
co mpleted downtown
Neighborhood Comm unity
Center. a SO-unit housing project
in the Wallace Street area for
low-and moderate-income
families and the rehabilitation of
more than 100 residences
through special home improve·
ment loans.
Other projects have removed
architectural barriers such as
cuts in curbs that limited ac·
cessibility of the physically
handicapped, improved water
and street facilities on the city's
west side· and funded public
service programs to aid
children. the elderly, the home·
less and the handicapped, a city
spokesman said.
NEW DIRECTOR Thomas
M. Morin of Long Beach is
the new campaign director
of the United Way for West
Orange County whose
member cities include 'Hunt·
ington Beach and Fountain
Valley.
Divorce d dad
wins cus tody
BOSTON <A P> -A divorced
father cannot be denied custody
of his child simply because he is
illicitly living with another
woman , according to the
Massachusetts Appeals Court.
The lengthy decision, written
by Judge C hri s topher
Armstrong, upheld a Middlesex
Probate Court decision award·
ing custody of an 8-year -old boy
to his father.
Ex-CIA agents
branching out
---------------------
WASHINGTON <AP> -The lucrative trade in
U.S. weapons technology abroad is prompting a
number of former CIA officials, including a past
deputy director, to cash in on their government ex·
perlise and contacts.
Gen. Vernon Walters, the CIA's No. 2 man
from 1972-76, received $300,000 this year from a
company that specializes in selling sophisticated
military technology to foreign countries, according
to government documents and interviews with the ·
principals.
While there is no suggestion that Walters'
dealings were in any way illegal, they highlight
some questions about restricting business ac-
tivities of former intelligence officials. CIA of·
ficials have access to sensitive government
secrets: they develop contacts with high-ranking
foreign officials, and there is a common suspicion
that they still work for the CIA even after they re·
sign.
Walters now an ambassador-at-large at the
State Depa;tment and a key figure in President
Reagan's foreign policy, said he ..
contacted top Moroccan of·
ricials on behalf or a firm in ·
terested in modernizing Moroc·
co's lank corps. ,
In an interview with Tbe
Associated Press, Walters said
his main work for the company,
Environmental Energy Systems
Inc., was "putting them (com·
pany officials) in touch with the right people." WALTUt
Morocco tentatively agreed to pay Environ·
mental Energy Systems $190 million for refitting
its tanks with sophisticated laser targeting, night·
vision equipment and new engines, said the com·
pany's president, John R. McLane.
The deal fe ll through, be said, when the U.S.
government agreed to supply Morocco with new
American tanks.
Walters said he also was involved with the
company's military sales proposals to Spain, South
Korea and Brazil, adding: "I would not do
anything with any country that was not a friend of
the United States.'·
Others may not have been so discriminating.
The House lntetugence Committee announced
plans recently to investigate former CIA operative
Edwin Wilson, who allegedly used his CIA contacts
and experience to illegally peddle advanced
weapons technology to Libyan leader Moammar
Khadafy.
U.S.·Libyan relations have been extremely
strained.
The House committee will examine "what
types of business former CIA employees are in and
their relationship with current employees and the
problems that result from former employees get·
ting involved with foreign governments," said
Rep. F.dward P. Boland, D-Mass., the committee
chairman.
Wilson and another former CIA official, Frank
Terpil, were indicted last y~ar on charges of ii·
legally supplying Khadafy with explosive timers,
sophisticated night-vision equipment .and <:>t~er
restricted military gear, and helping tn trallllllg
terrorists.
,Federal investigators said the items were sold
to Libya for $3.2 million, after the prices were in·
rtated to double the items' actual value.
Walters said he would favor a two-year ban on
a former CIA official doing business with agepcies
or government.s that he was involved with durin&
his CIA service. But be added: "There's no way
you can say, 'You can't do business abroad: I
thlnk that would be a restriction on the in-
dividual's freedom."
Walters, who left. the CIA in J uly 1976, began
work for EnVironmental Energy Sy1tem1 on the
Moroccan tank deal in J uly 1977 and waa paid
$300,000 for bis services, according to McLane.
Aboui $2 billion In U.S. weapooi and military
technology was sold abroad through commercial
chanllels in 1980, according to State Department
records. That compares with $7.7 billion in official
U.S. govemment·to·govemme11t arms export.s ln
1980.
In commercial sales, forellJL eovemmenu
contract direc:Uy with U.S. manufacturen who
mu.al obtain a U.S. eovemment Ucen.se before the w~apons or military technology can be shipped.
r.
---
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II your 1wtoxim1te federal
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40% 20.23%
30% 17.34%
*Tax e1191nptlon lost if you withdraw all or part of tbla deposit prior to maturity
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Cardinals cut Cowboys
off at the pass. C2.
RalllS still as unpredictable as ever
Once again they play to the level of their competition in beating Cleveland, 27-16
By JOHN SEVANO
Of ... o.lly ...... ·-The Rams have done it again. As historv has
proved throughout the years. the Rams continue to
play to the level or their competition.
This lime, Cleveland was their victim. And,
who could really blame the Browns for scratching
their heads in bewiderment?
Certainly the Rams team that beat the Browns
here at Anaheim Stadium Sunday-afternoon, 27·16,
wasn't the same team that struggled to a 2·2 rec·
ord the past month a&ainst the likes of Houston,
New Orleans, Green Bay and Chicago -clubs
with a combined 7·13 mark.
But that's been the history of the Rams . Tradi·
tionally, they win when they have to win.
"It's weird." says offensive tackle Doug
France. ··w e 've always played just well enough to
win and I can't explain why.
"When our opposition is 1-15, then that's usual·
ly how we'll play. And then when we get a team
that's supposed to beat us, usually we win.
"Either we get motivated to play the good
teams, or being the underdog <the Rams were ac·
tually a 21 2-point favorite> brings out the best in us ...
The Rams were certainly at their best against
Cleveland and, in a strange sense, their
performance is almost a backhanded compliment
to the Browns as they represented the first
formidable roe the Rams faced in 1981.
Indeed, Coach Ray MaJavasi's squad was up
to the challenge, though. The offense, under the
superb direction of Pat Haden, was sharp. And the
defense was even sharper.
In five first·half possessions, when the Rams
built a 14-3 advantage, there were two touchdowns.
a missed field goal by Frank Corral <of 22 yards).
a fumble by Wendell Tyler and, oh yes, another
drive stopped by the Browns' defense.
onl' TOI against the NFC's No 1 ranked defense
against the pass.
And. by the time the Browns had regrouped. it
was too late. Tyler had a touchdown run of 2 yards
and caught a l ·yard TD pass; Mike Guman had
a 4-yard TD run . and Corral kicked field goals or
38 and 41 yards.
The Rams' defepse also limited the Browns to
318 total yards : g4 less than their seasonal
avcraRe.
"It's a sign or a tom with a Jot or talent,"
says defensive tackle Phil Murphy in trying lo ex-
plain the Rams "It's like going to college. If
you're not challenged then more than likely you'll
come home with Cs and Bs. But if you go to a
place like Yale you're going to put out more
"Ray (Mala vasi) has told us every day that I
can remember that we can beat any team in the
league -and we believe that," adds Murphy. "We
seem to win when we have to win and that's all
that counts "
The Rams, indeed. needed "to put out more"
to stop the potent passing game of Brian Sipe and
Co .. ranked second behind San Diego in the AFC.
The Rams who. like the Browns, started the
season 0·2, needed a victory to keep pace with
Atlanta (3·1 > in the NFC's Western Division. The
Falcons play the Eagles in Philadelphia tonight.
Sipe, who came into the game having complet·
ed more than 56 percent of his passes, could
manal?e only 50 percent ( 14 of 28 for 250 yards and
And, it doesn't seem to be a coincidence that
the Rams are starting to put things together about
the same time Cleveland, Atlanta and Dallas ap-,
ISet-RAMS, Page C2>
Best records
aren't enOugh
Not this crazy baseball season '
From AP Dispatches
Don't tell lhe Cincinnati Reds
or the SL Louis Cardinals how
the s plit-season format in
baseball created more interest
down the stretch. Each had the
best overall record in their
divisions in this mixed-up crazy
season, but when the mini ·
playoffs get rolling Tuesday, the
Reds and Cardinals will be
home watching.
The Reds' overall record was
not only the best in the National
League Wes t . but lops in
baseball. They had the mis ·
fortune, however. of finishing
just a halt-game behind the Los
Angeles Dodgers in the first halr
of the season and then losing out
to the Houston Astros on the
next to last day of the second
season Cincinnati was the only
team to play over .000 for the en-
tire season.
the Reds' Tom Seaver. "You can
moan all you want about the
split season. we had our chances
to win."
Cincinnati Manager J ohn
McNamara was not quite so
diplomatic.
"It's been a mess. that's what
it's been," he said. "To get
cheated out of it by somebody's
lamebrain idea is ridiculous ..
Before their season-ending
game in Cincinnati on Sunday,
the entire Reds team was in·
troduced to the fans. They lined
up carrying pennant proclaim-
' ng, .. Baseball's Best Record 1981. ..
The best-of-fi ve mini-playoffs
open Tuesday with the Kansas
City Royals hosting the Oakland
A's and the Astros at home
against the Dodgers. Wednes·
day. the Ya nkees are in
Milwaukee and the Expos host
the Phillies. The second-half
champions are at home for the
first two games with the first
half champions given the advan-
tage of having the final three
home games, if necessary.
Ricky Feacher hauls in a 48-yard pass from Brian Sipe as Pat Thomas pursues. Thomas pulled a muscle on the play.
The Cardinals finished as the
runner-up to Philadelphia in the
first half and the Expos in the
second half. but overall. their
record was the best in the Na-
tional League East. Cincinnati
and St. Louis bet ween them had
two or the five best records in
the majors, but now have all
winter to gripe about the ine·
q_uities of the svslem
"We had our chances." said
Because the Royals ended
Sunday just one-half game
ahead of the A's. they will have
lo make up a double-header
Monday against the Indians in
Cleveland. The Royals need just
a s plit or the double-header lo be
the second·half c hampion.
Statistics tell a story
Like Youngblood's sack which left Sipe in a daze
ByCURTSEEDEN
OfllleD.ilyl'i ... St.llfl
As mundane as they are. the defensive statistics
for the Rams ' 27-16 victory over Cleveland Sunday
may hold the key to the game 's eventual outcome.
For instance. the Browns' Robert L. Jackson, a
6·1, 230 pound hulk who literally knocked Wendell
Tyler out of the game with a bruising hit, deserves
s pecial attention for his seven tackles and two as-
sists.
Less notable, perhaps. are Jim Youngblood's
stats . Officially, Youngblood was credited with just a
couple of tackles and one assisted tackle And, oh
yes. one very big sack.
FOR IT WAS YOUNGBLOOD who blindsided
Browns quarterback Brian Sipe on a blitz play late
in the third quarter with the Browns trailing, 14-10.
That hit, Sipe disclosed later, resulted in what
may or may not be a concussion which at times left
the eighth.year quarterback in a daze for much of the
rem ainderorthe contest
"l got hit in the back of the head. I've had
problems with this before." Sipe explained. "It af-
fects my visual center."
Sipe was quick to point out that he's not a doctor
and he really can't diagnose the problem as a con-
cussion, but it was evident the Browns toned down
their o(fensive strategy following the devastating
hit.
·'It forced us to play a little more conservative·
ly," Sipe admitted. ''But that's not the story. The
story was the Rams' defense. They did a good job of
sending in guys to keep the pressure on me.''
STILL, IT SHOULD BE noted that on their next
series or downs, the Browns -then trailing 21·10
following Mike Guman's 4-yard touchdown run -
handed off three straight times to Mike Pruitt in fail·
ing to pick up a first down.
Actually, the Browns' troubles began earlier
when their game plan was thrown a curve by the
swarming Ram defense.
Sipe explained: "Our plan was to make suffi-
cient yardage so we wouldn't have to face their
nickel defense. Against Atlanta and Cincinnati (the
Browns' two victories) we managed to gel plenty of
first downs on our first or second play."
Sipe said that by the time the Rams had opened a
27-10 lead on the strength or two Frank Cornl field
goals. he was•· gelling roygy."
·'They asked me if wanted to come out but I
really wanted lo stay in. But J don't want to make
a big lhing about this," Sipe continued. "I think
this <blows to the bead> happened about six times
In '79."
SPEAKING OF INJURIES, Tyler's has been
classilied as a hamstring problem and hls status
next week in Atlanta is uncertain.
I ,
Sunday's NFL scores
Rams 27, Cleveland 16
San Diego 24, Seattle 10
Buffalo 23, Baltimore 17
Minnesota 24, Chicago 21
St. Louis 20, Dallas 17
Green Bay 27, NY Giants 14
New England 33, Kansas City 17 San Francisco 30, Washingtoo 17 Houston 17, Cincinnati 10
Pittsburgh 20, New Orleans 6 Denver 17, Oakland 0
Tampa Bay 28, Detroit 10
NY Jets 28, Miami 28
Tonight's game
Atlanta at Philadelphia (channel 7 at 6)
(NFL roundup, ~e C2)
(NFL summaries, page C4)
One thing that was certain, however , was Robert
Jackson's hit
'Tm just an aggressive player," the soft-spoken
giant of a linebacker said. Asked if there was a pre·
vious altercation with Tyler to warrant the hit,
Jackson replied: ''I made a tackle on him earlier. He
got up and pushed me a little but it didn't bother me.··
Jackson said the biggest problem the Browns'
defense raced was Cullen Bryant.
"We didn't expect the fullback (Bryant) to hurt
us the way he did. We thought going in the major con-
cern was going to be Tyler. But Bryant Is big and
strong, and with that offensive line In front of him. he
proved hard to stop," Jackson added.
''This was the first time we haven't gotten off on
the right foot," admitted Charles White, the former
Heisman Trophy winner from USC. "I was disap·
pointed I didn't have a good game (six carries. 12
yards), and I was disappointed that we didn't win.
"BUT A 2·3 RECORI) is no reason to panic. The
Central Division won't be decided until the last game
not 'til December," White added.
Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano agreed with the
second-year tall back.
"We can resolve some of the problem a we had to·
day and~ ready for Pittsburgh <a big AFC Central
Conference confrontation next Sunday in
·Pittsburgh>. We just made a myriad of mistakes
that led to our self-destruction.
"Andyouhavetogive credittotbe Rams and Pat
Haden. I thought they allowed.Haden great flexibill·
ty. They exploited his balance.
"As for us,'' Rutigliano continued. "we just
didn't have a good game and I don't have any ex·
cuses. And. when you a play a 1ood team llke the
Rams, that just makea thlncs worse." ..
1
Rick11 Feochtr f1nds hlm$el/ in ·the grasp of LtRoy Irvin. ·
)~
If they win the first game, the
second game won't be played. If
Oakland emerges as double
champions. they will have four
home games in the mini-playoffs
as a reward.
The A's and Royals open the
third season Tuesday afternoon
in Kansas City. Billy Marlin will
pitch Mike Norris < 12·9> while
Dick Howser counters with Den-
nis Leonard <13·11). Ironically,
Howser succeeded Martin as the
manager of the New York
Yankees in 1980. Martin was
fired twice by George Steinbren-
ner while Howser enjoyed the
honor just once.
ln Tuesday's other game,
rookie sensation Fernando
Valenzuela ( 13-7) opposes Nolan
Ryan ( 11·5> in the Astrodome.
Just last week Ryan threw a no-
hitter against the Dodgers .
Each of the four divisions has ·
a team that finished under .500
in one of the two seasons. The
Yankees and Phillies were un·
der .500 in the second season
while the Royals and Astros lost
more than half their games in
the first season. And, Kansas
City's cumulative season record
did not reach .500 despite a good
second half.
Philadelphia, New York and
Los Ange les will all have to
overcome the momentum
gener ated by the second-half
winners while the Royals and
A's were evenly matched in the
second season.
HOLBERT WINS
.4T RIVERSIDE
RIVERSIDE <AP > -Al
Holbert of Warrington, Pa., was
a surprise winner Sunday of the
Budweiser Grand Prix Can·Am
at Riverside International
Raceway with a record average
speed or 119.391 mUes-per-bour.
Holbert took over the lead in
his CRC·l Chevrolet with four
laps to go from rookie driver
Jeff Wood of Loa Ancelee in a
-Lola Chevrolet, and beld on to
win by 1.008 eecondl.
Victory for Holbert, a repeat
winner at Riverside, wu 1QOi
for $23,500 In prtle m_, ud i
boost in hla •tock for llle Mwllll
ch1mpion1M• race •• U1e
circuit.
Orengo Coast OAIL'Y PILOT/Monday, October 5. 1981 / .,.. __________ ;;... __________ ... ~--------------------------------------~--------------------------.....,
Royals must go to Cleveland BuJlflghter only muffed the kill ,
Dawe McKay laHed Larry Gara Ill TIJUANA Althou1h hl1 • for a Ue·brcaklna home run In the iapework was lmpreaslve, 18·year·
seventh lnnlntt Sunday, llftln1 old David Renk of Houston 1ot a Cards shoot: ..
Oakland to o 4 3 victory ovu Kansas trumpet warnln1 after mi11in1 slx 11word
City and sending the Royws to Cleveland today thrusts against hla second bull recently.
for a makeup double·header with the India~. A round of boos, catcallJ and wh11Ues from
The Cleveland trip, which the Royals had been the crowd or 7 ,000 greeted the sUm. youna
drcadlna. will determine whether the A's or American matador.
Royals arc i;ccond-half champions and will also "l felt conrldent about everything J did .:x·
have a beorln1 o n the cept for the kill," Renk aaJd later. •·well, the
number or home games the sun will still come up tomorrow and 1 'll be
Madlock, Lansford
win batting titles
A 'g will have in the upcom· back."
,,
I ,
I
r .
fj I
I , .
~:
'J I ,
I(
,, .
I .,
I ...
..
From AP Olspatche!f
BiU Madlock won his third bat Ill ting title and Camey Lansford wen
his first Sunday as major-league
baseball closed its regular season
except for the Kans a s City R oyals and
Cleveland Indians, that is.
The Royals must play a double header in
Cleveland Monday afternoon to determine the
second-half winner in the American League Wes t. But no players in·
volved in those games can a!·
feet any of the individual bat-
ting a nd pitching races.
Pittsburgh's Madlock hH
.341, 16 points better than
Pete Rose in the National
League batting race. He also
won the batting title in 1975
and '76 while with the
Chicago Cubs.
Madlock Mike Schmidt of the
Phillies led the NL in homers with 31, runs
batted in with 91 and runs scored with 78.
Rose had the most hits, 140; Bill Buckner of
the Cubs led in doubles with 35, and Craig
Reynolds of Houston and Gene Richards of San
Diego tied with 12 triples. .
Rookie Tim Raines of Montreal was tops tn
s tolen bases with 71.
The top pitchers were Bruce S utter of St.
Louis with 25 saves, Tom Seaver of Cincinnati
with 14 wins. Nolan Ryan of Houston with a l.69
earned run average, and Dodgers rookie
Fernando Valenzuela with 180 strikeouts.
Lansford of the Boston Red Sox batted .336
to capture the AL hilling title by eight points
over Kirk Gibson of Detroit.
Oakland's Rickey Henderson led the league
in runs scored with ~·
Quote of the day
Heavyweight fighter James "Quick"
Tillis, talking about his first trip to
Chicago· "I put my suitcase down and I
looked up at the Sears Tower and said.
'Chicago, I'm going to conquer you.' When
I looked down. my suitcase was gone ..
.-. From Page C1
L
ing mini-series . . . Kirk
Glbsoa blooped an RBJ single
to score the winning run in
the n inth and MIU Wilcox
scattered eight hits as
Detroit shaded 1'econd-halr
Eastern Division c hampion
Milwaukee, 3·2 ... The
McKay Brewers' foe in the first
round, the New York Yankees. were also beaten
in their regular-season finale 5·2 by Baltimore.
Eddie Murray, who drove in more than one·
fourth of the Orioles' runs during the second
half or the season, hit a two-run homer to lead
the charge . . Boston closed its season with a
6·2 win at Cleveland, as Dwight Evana homered
twice and doubled against Indians' starter John
Denny .. ~Jerry ·Hairston capped a four-run
Chicago rally with a two-out RBI sinele in the
ninth as the White Sox closed out their season
with a bang 13-12 over Minnesota ... Sixth·
inning home runs by Golden West College
graduate Terry Bulling and Tom Paciorek
broke up a scoreless duel and helped Seattle de·
feat Toronto. 2·0.
Mets fire Torre on last day
Joe Torre became the seventh Iii
major-league manager to fall under
the ax this season when the New
York Mets announced Sunday they
had fired Torr e and his entire staff. Torre said
he was told of the decision by New York
General Manager Frank Cashen before the
Mets' final game Sunday. The Mets went out
and beat Montreal, 2·1 ... Lonnie Sm ith ex·
tended his hitting streak to 23
games with a third-inning
double and scored the win·
ning run on a wild pitch as
Philadelphia tuned up for the
playoffs with a 2·1 win over
the Chicago Cubs . . . Bob
S hirley and two relief
·· pitchers combined on a four-
hitter to pace St. Louis to a
4-0 win over Pittsburgh ...
Torre Mario Soto hurled a one-
h1tler-Chris Chambliss' leadoff single in the
second inning to lead Cincinnati to a 3·0 de-
-ris1on over Atlanta ... Pinch-hiller Milt May
drove in the go-ahead run with a groundout to
cap a three-run eighth inning r ally that lift-ed
San Francisco past San Diego, 4·3.
~RAMS DEFEAT CLEVELAND • • • ...
h pear on their schedule in suc-
cessive weeks.
n ·'I guess what we need is a
'' ~hallenge," says defensive end
lcody Jones. "When we play a
''weaker opponent we have a ten·
1 dency to relax. When we play so·
11meone good we want to show
''-them we're the baddes."
The Rams. too, seem to have a
-tremendous aversion for playing
well dis pite distractions .
Whereas a team like Dallas wins
because of their o rganization, the
Rams seem to have a knack for
winning despite theirs
1 Already this season the Rams
."have had to whether controversv
tiSurrounding Malavasi's job; an
, ·all edged power s truggle between
~.G e n e r a I M a n a g e r Don
"Klosterman and Malavasi. a
quarterbac k controver sy sur-a rounding Haden, Dan Pastorini.
!1 J eff Rutledge (and the departed
•;rVince FerragamoJ; and the un-
1·timely and unpopular release of
'),
12·year veteran Fred Dryer.
Incredibly <or maybe it isn't in-
credible at all l, the Rams' three-
game winning streak occurred
just about the same time all the
above forementioned reached its
peak.
"Cleveland is an outstanding
ball club, but we had to win,"
adds cornerback Rod Perry .
'·And, we've always played bet·
ter when there's been adversity
and when our backs are against
the wall. It's been that way ever
since I've been here"
··We always seem lo put
ourselves in a position where we
have lo wm." admits Rich Saul.
who 1s in his 12th season with the
Rams . "It's really nothing new to
us. We've been there before and
we know what it takes to get to the
playoffs
"It botls down to either folding
or buckling up a little tighter and
going after it."
Going "after it" is what the
Rams must continue lo do now
. . and what the Browns have to
start doing.
"Maybe we'retoosmartfortbe
average football mind," says de·
fensive end Jack Youngblood of
the Rams' Jekyll-and-Hyde
personality. "Maybe we un-
derstand the game too well.
"You have to have talent,
character and the people to go out
and excel when they need to."
"It really burns me to think we
lost those first two games." says
Haden, who seems to have finally
worked into a groove as he com·
pleted 21of31 passes for 205 yards
and one TD. "In my mind we
should be 5-0."
In the Browns' minds they
might not agree they should be5·0
. . . but they certainly feel they
should be better than 2·3.
Ma ybe they just haven't
learned how to turn it on-and-0ff
yet like the Rams.
Of course, most teams don't
have that kind of ability.
:Astros Iook DI Touchdown Crosswordf i
Rogers wins in sudden death
BUI Rogers curled In a 12-foot • birdie putt on the first playo(f hole
Sunday to defeat Ben Crenshaw in
sudden-death for the championship or the Texas
Open in San Antonio. Rogers had sunk a four·
foot birdie putt on the 17th green to force the
playoff with the two Texans tying at 14-under·
par 266 after regulation ... The veteran LPGA
pair of Donna Caponi and Katby Whitworth
went into sudden death to win their second con-
s e cu live LPGA T~am Championship in
Pertland, Ore ... Spain's Seve Ballesteros won
the Sparush Open ·m 'Barcelona ... Pro or Con,
a 14-to·l s hot, took the lead shortly after the
start and we nt on to capture the Linda Vista
Handicap by one length before 37,620 at the Oak
Tree meeting at Santa Anita . . Martina
Navratilova brought Tracy Austin's 28-match
winning streak to an abrupt halt and captured
the U.S. Women's Indoor Tennis Championship
crown with a 6-0. 6·2 triumph ... Rick Mears
inherited the lead just four laps from the finish
and fl ew to his fifth Indy car victory or the
season in winning the Watkins Glen 200 ... Dar·
rell Waltrip dominated the field to win the Holly
Farms 400 Winston Cup Grand National race in
North Wilkes boro, N.C.
Televisi on, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: .t ./ ./ .r excellent; .r" .t worth
watching; ./ .r fair; .r forget It. e 6p.m.,Channe11 I I I/
NFL FOOTBALL: Atlanta at Philadelphia.
An·nouncers: Frank Gifford, Howard Cose II and
Fran Tarkenton.
The Eagles are still undefeated after turning a
one-point decision into a rout bV scoring 22 points In the final 10 minutes against Washington last wei!k.
The Falcons, meanwhile, were losing their first de·
clsion to Cleveland but still lead the National Con-
ference West standinQs.
RADIO Football -Atlanta at Philadelphia, KNX ( 1070).
TUESDAY'S TV-RADIO
Baseball -Oakland at Kansas City, 12 : 10 p.m.,
Channel 7, KNX radio (1070).
Top 10 remains
Edison property ,
Things remain stable at the top in the Daily
Pilot's Orange County Top 10 rankings -
Edison High's Chargers continue to make that
job easy following their 26th straight victory
and fourth this campaign.
In fact, the top four spots remain un-
changed from a week ago, but after that, it gets
sticky as Loara. El Dorado and Servile exit the
Top lOfollowing last week's losses.
Newcomers to the list include Pacifica
<No. 8) and Westminster (No. 9), while El
Modena returns (No. 7).
This week's big games among ranked
teams include No. 1 Edison against unranked
Mater Dei !2·2>. No. 4 Estancia (4-0) against
No. 10 Corona del Mar <4-0l, No. 6 Villa Park
< 4-0 and unscored upon > and unranked Foothill
(3·1J and Pacifica (4-0> against unranked El
Dorado 12·2>
Pos. Team. record
I. Edison <4·0 1
2. Esperanza <4-0>
3. Marina (4·0)
4. Estancia (4·0)
5. Fountain Valley (3·1 >
6. Villa Park <4·0)
7. El Modena (2-2>
8. Pacifica (4·01
9. Westminster <3·1>
10. Coronadel Mar (4·0)
Next game
Mater Dei < 2·2 I
Kennedy (3·1)
Millikan (0·3>
Coronadel Mar (4·0>
Lakewood (0·3)
Foothill ( 3· l >
Santa Ana (3·1 l
El Dorado < 2·2 l
LB Wilson 0 ·2>
Estancia (4·0)
~
Cowboys up
Late field goal does it
Front AP Dlapatcbei
ST. LOUIS Nell O'Donoghue kicked a 37°yard
field goal with 23 seconds left, givln.a the St. LoW.
Cardinals a 20-17 National Football Lea1ue upset
over the Dallas Cowboys Sunday.
O'Oonoghue's kick cllmaxed a SS.yard It. Louis
drive in the game's closing minutes end knocked
Dallas, 4·1, from the ranks or the league's unbeaten
tl'ams . The Cardinals, who are 2:.3, had lost six
straight to the Cowboys.
Quarterback Jim Hart threw passes o( 20 yards
to Doug Marsh and 19 to Roy Green to spur the win·
nmg drive after the Cowboys' Danny White punted
out of bounds at the St. Louis 7,
Just prior to O'Donoghue's decisive kick, Ottis
Anderson scampered 9 yards to the Cowboys' 20.
Jn other action Sunday:
Broncos 17, Raiders 0
OAKLAND -Denver s afety Steve Foley
killed Oakland's only serious touchdown threat
with a fumble recovery, and the Broncos handed
the Super Bowl champions a second consecutive
s hutout loss by beating the Raiders 17-0.
Denver, the top-rated defensive team in the
National Football League, held the Oakland of·
fense to less than 200 yards, sacked Jim Plunkett
three times and intercepted him once. Tile lteidera
went to young quarterback M1rc WilMn ln the
fourth period and he was promptly illtercepted.
The victory gave Denver a 4·1 record. Tbe
Raiders. who went 15 years without beina 1flut out
before losing to Detroit 16·0 last week, dropped to
2·3.
Chargers 24. Seahawks 10
SAN DJ EGO Quarterback Dan Fouts tossed
three touchdown passes and broke his club record
with 30 completions, propelling San Diego to a
24·10 victory over the Seattle Seahawks.
The victory, San Diego's fourth in five games,
enabled the Chargers lo stay in a first-place tie
with Denver in the AFC West. Seattle, winless in
eight meetings with San Diego, fell to 1·4.
Fouts. who attempted 41 pasau, had
touchdown tosses of 12 and 11 yards to Charlie
Joiner and a 9-yarder to tight end Kellen Winslow.
He finished with 302 yards passing, none longer
than 15 yards.
Patriots 33, Chiefs 17
FOXBORO. Mass. -Matt Cavanaugh jumped
on two Kansas City mistakes to throw for one
touchdown and run for another as· New England
dumped the Chiefs 33-17 for their first victory of
the season.
The Patriots, 1·4, grabbed a 14·7 halftime lead
thanks lo their first two interceptions of the year.
Aft~r Mike Hawkins picked off former San
Clemente High standout BUI Kenney's first pass.
Cavanaugh tossed a 13-year scoring pus to Don
Hassel beck.
The Patriots' quarterback followed up Mark
Buben's 47-yard interception return to score on an
8-yard bootleg with 6:48 left in the half.
Jets 28, Dolphins 26 (OT)
MIAMI -New York's Pat Leahy missed a
48-yard fi eld goal attempt on the final play of over-
time as the Jets and Miami had to settle for a 28·28
ltc
Richard Todd's fourth touchdown pass of the
game. a 36·yard pass play to wide receiver Bobby
Jones with 1 :U9 remaining in regulation play,
enabled the Jets to catch up with the Dolphins and
send the game into the extra period.
The JeL5, winners of six straight games pre-
viously over the Dolphins. rallied in the final
quarter on an eight-play, 76-yard tying march.
highlighted by Todd completions of 13 and 6 yards
to Wesley Walke r , who earlier caught two
touchdown passes. ·
Buccaneers 28. Lions 10 • _, I
. . •
:-for sweep lftfbJ
thome ACROSS
1,5 Shown, star LB 33 Falcons' OB
AnlWef' To Lui Weetl'I Puzzle
NFL standings
!***********#' • • : JOHNSON & SON : LOS ANGELES (AP > 11 ~fe1~h~1~:!~ 34 :::cc:~~Claudle -
.-Whe n the National 12 Kind of pass 35 Giants' DE League West divisional 14 _Miss Ma111ham
series begins Tuesday 15 Box-office draw 36 SeehaWka' T Hines
night in Houston, the 17 Helsman OB 37 The -Cardlnals
Astros face the unenvia-Kinnick (ab.)
ble task of defeating 18 High oole 39 Hall of Farner Bell
b o t h F e r n a n d 0 19 Biiia' C Grant 41 Lawyer's Of'g. v I I d J 21 $1<)0 bill 44 Hall of Famer a enzue a an erry 22 Portal w<>1clechowlcz
Reuss. the Los Angeles 2A Hall _ Fame 46 Hall of Farner
D o d g er s · a c e I e ft · ze Redskins' CB Par1ite<
handers. Parrish 49 Lavish party
For if Houston fails lo 29 Hall of Famer 51 Amor'acounterpart
sweep the first two "NlghtTraln"-53 Bad(pref.)
54 Buccaneer'• OT
Randy-
58 Packera' LB Ed -
g a m e s i n t h e ======== •1~""1!!!' ..... ~-..i,...•
Astrodome. they would
have to win al least two
of three in Dodger DOWN
$tadiurn to advance to 1 Bears· RB Ron _
the NL c h ampionship 2 Notion
eries. And the Astros 3 Lineman (ab.)
have won but two of 4 Linemen (ab.)
their last 13 games in 5 Vikings' LB Matt -
os Angeles, including e Ollera' RB
• u n d a y · s r e g u I a r Campbell
e a s o n • e n d i n g 5 . 3 7 Lineman (ab.)
riumph. 8 Flag offic.r (ab.)
9 Cardlnala' LB ''I'd say we have to Wlllama
in them both,'' said 10 Hall of Farner Lary
ouston Manager Bill 11 Redaklna' CB
lrdon of the two games Lavender
n the Astrodome. "It's 13 Peckers' CB Ma11t -
o u g h p I a y i n g 18 Polntt for a aafety
omeplace where you 20 Behold!
on't play well, especial· 22 Redaklna' Butz •nd Giant•'
11
58 Hall of Farner Neal
59 With 47 Down
Falcons' aw RB
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Western Division
W L T PF PA Pct.
Atlanta 3 1 O 109 62 .750
Rams 3 2 O 123 96 .600
San Francisco 3 2 O 113 106 .600
New Orleans 1 4 0 50 105 .200
Eastern Division
Philadelphia 4 o O 93 40 1.000
Dallas 4 1 O 126 78 .800
St. Louis 2 3 O 94 117 .400
NY Gjants 2 3 0 71 83 .400
Was hington O 5 O 77 149 .000
Central Division
Minnesota 3 2 O 103 US
Tampa Bay 3 2 O 96 80
Detroit 2 • 3 O 97 99
Green Bay 2 3 O 96 119
Chicago J 4 O 82 109
.600
.600
.400
.400
.200
• • AMERICAN CONFERENCE «
Western Division •
San Diego
Denver
Kansas City
Oakland
Seattle
W L T PF PA Pct. •
4 1 0 162 l20 .800 •
4 1 0 106 54 .800 •
3 2 0 124 132 .600 •
2 3 0 63 62 .400 •
I 4 0 68 101 .200 •
Eastern Division •
Miami 4 0 1 125 83 .900 •
Buffalo 3 2 O 127 67 .600 •
Presents ...
NY Jets l 3 l 101 145 .300 1•
New Engla nd 1 4 O 106 121 .200 • ., ..............
Baltimore 1 4 O 87 145 .200 :
Central Division ii
Pittsburgh 3 2 O 128 104 .600
Cincinnati 3 2 O 112 112 .600 !
Houston 3 2 O 80 82 .600 •
Cleveland 2 3 O 81 114 .400 •
• • • • .. .. • .. • • • •
NFl.'1
•SUNDAY•
A•me
Denver
over
O•kl•nd
Detroit
y when you have three Jenning•
a mes there." 2a Smelter Input
The Astros' last win ln 25 8rowM' oe
s Angeles before Sun. Judaon -
~······································ --.--+---1: Pete's Pick $8e The
: at Johnson & Son ·
over
T•mp• B•y
•MONDAY•
A"•nta
a y was their single· 26 80ho mon.y, once ame playoff for the NL 27 Greek i.tter
es• tiUe ln 1""""'. 2l8 S.....,_, CB . • ..,,., atount 41 Th9 1111'1 8"d
"If they're concerned, '° w1111em -·Mart c.tt'e conf. bit's IO(>tf for wi." aald ,, .._,,._.,~a ..,..aea ....
01 An•elu rlrst 3:2 hfore.poe~· •-utman Steve Garvey. 34 t'"'*1ectlon 43 Endltto •""..,. «
31 n.e -...,,.. (IDJ' roe
Nolan -an. 11·5, wiU • Halt of,...,., ----------------------
ppose Vaiwuel.a. lJ.7. ""'"'°''°-... ,_, _.~e i... '°' eotution T~ mpa. .0 OUtr.(fNO
t 1
I
: Johnson & .,on EXCfi"ING
•. Lincoln-Mercury * ••• '12' : 2626 HAllOa aYD.
: COITAt•SA AT JllllSll I
:. 540-5630 . ~··*********************************** • A
•
I
' . I
l I
U.S. team sweeps
into Davis finals
McEnroe, Tanner complete rout
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -
Left-handers John McEnroe and
Roscoe Tanner won s ingles
matches Sunday as the UnJted
States swept the Australians In
Du vis Cup tennis competition for
the first time since 1946.
The 5·0 semifinal triumph sent
the Americans into the finals for
the 5lst time since Cup compeli·
hon began in 1900. The finals
against Argentina will be held
Dec 11·13 at a site in the United
States yet to be announced.
McEnroe, the dominant player
in the U.S. triumph, downed the
top Australian player, Peter
McNamara, 9-7. 6·0 in Sunday's
first match. Tanner, who defeat·
ed McNamara in five s ets on
Friday, rallied lo beat Mark Ed·
monds on 3·6, 6·2, 6·3 in Sunday's
final match .
Davis Cup matches normally
are best-of.five sets. But Sun
day's matches were s hortened to
best-of three after the United
States clinched the semifinal
victory on Saturday.
Tanner, ranked eighth in the
world and who will turn JO years
old later this month. fell behind
early when Edmondson broke
Colorful
weekend
in Newport
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dally , .... a..tl11t Writer
Newport Harbor and the ocean
off the Balboa Peninsula were
alive with color Saturday and
Sunday as 150 Hobie Cats in 10
classes competed in the 14th An
cient Mariner Regatta
The brilliantly colored sails
virtually blanketed the harbor at
tht> startine line off the Ancient
M armer Restaurant :n the north
Lido channel.
Coursrs took the boats down
through the channel. around the
outside bell buoy and to a mark
off the Balboa beach before
turning for a finish back at the
s tarting line
Competition was in three
classes of Hobie-18s, four classes
of Hobie-16s . two classes of
Hobie-14s and a Hobie-Turbo
class.
The event is the highlig ht of
the local Hobie Cat fall racing
season and is considered the
"granddaddy" of Hobie regal·
las
Trophy winners:
Hot>l•·11A 1 Sieve Myrttr, Oan. Point l V.
POlnll, J. Ni<ll Sletle, Balboa hltnd, ..... J Joftn
WOt, 0-Point,'·
118 1 Jim lewl,1, Aomno Hiii~. l 'h J Merli C.rc!OM, Ol<Nnl, .....
II Novice 1 At...,., c;-st.,., Newpon 8 .. cll,
S"', J Don u"*rty, Torrance. '"'· ) GltM Blacllway.Glenoa .. , 7'11.
''"' 1 "'en Evuw. Ht..tllorne, 7V., 1 Jim 81ocll, ltount Hllh, I), J Geoffrey Wtl'11, ltnrly Hllll, 17
168 , Jolln AOH•Ouooan. Newp0r1 Bffcl" JV.; 2 Mervin Gentsw19, Tanana,•"'; J M'-• Walktr, MllW, 1
16C 1 CM-ter ~. Cororwo dlll Mar, I~. J. Bruce 8ockwtklt, Woodland Hllll, 14' J Kim Mc R ... Co.IA! Mew, uir.. '
Novice -1 Miile Chet, S.n 01-. U; J Jus1111
l tnculer, Lt Jolla, 14, l Jun Mon<Htu, Btllllo-r. 30.
""' I Mike Petter-.. Van Nuy" ~. 1 lrvc• Flekb, To-ranee. 7'4
148 , Jim Lenu, Rtn<llo Ptl<X Ve"'"· 1, '
JO/WI Oralle. Lo.,.,. .. ,, 11.
J ll.Hoblt·1' Tu'11o Lury Chbllo4m, Ocetnsldt,
Outlaw capture
Angelman race
Outlaw. s kippered by Seth
Morrell of Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club was the Class A win·
ner in the seventh and final race
of BCYc·s Angelman Series for
Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet yachts
The final was actually three
races over closed courses off the
Newport and Balboa Pier with
two races sailed Saturday and
one on Sunday.
Class B winner was Flying
Colors, Dave Stone. BCYC, and
Class C was won by Aloha II.
G lenn Reed, South Shore Yacht
Clu b.
Race Committee chairman
Elmer Carvey said the overall
results of the series would be
computed and the winners an-
nounced at an early date.
For C'lasi/lfd Ad
ACJ10N
Call
• his service ln the fourth aame or
the f1n.;t set.
But tht.i hard se rvlnlC
American came back to win
with the help of several mis·
take!! by Edmondson Tanner
broke the Australian's serve in
the sixth game of the final two
sets.
Australian team officials were
unsure when the last s weep or an
Aussie learn had occurred, but
they said it may have been the
1946 loss to the Americans.
Australia has swept the United
States three times since then.
Sunday's matches completed
the first U .S sweep since the
Americans de(eated Italy 5·0 in
the 1979 finals.
McEnroe said he was looking
forward to facing Argentina.
· · 1 would think it should be a
great match," McEnroe said.
"With Jose Luis Clerc and
Guillermo Villas in the top 10. it
should be very tough." he said.
"Qn paper, it should be our
toughest match yet. But I think
we can win every one of them if
we play well." said McEnroe,
who added that he would play in
the Davis Cup as long as he is in·
vited.
"We 've played all our
matches in the United States
and that's a big plus for us." he
added. noting that the Portland
<'rowd was a factor in the
American domina11on o f
Australia.
The match on artificial sur-
f ace at Portland's Memorial
Coliseum drew a crowd or 34.518
over three days, a record for
Davis Cup competition in the
United States.
'"You wouldn't have thought
that Portland would have been a
great place to play the match,
but it turned out to be."
Mc En roe said. "The people
were very s upportive. You
couldn't have expected more "
McEnroe said he had a hard
time being ready for the match
against McNamara
.. I told YOU l celebrated a lot
last night," McEnroe said . "I
had trouble getting up.'·
He also said he probably made
a mis take by protesting so
vehemently on a linesman's call
Saturday in the doubles match
in which he and Peter Fleming
clinched the U S. victory.
"We should have stopped."
McEnroe said "The only reason
we argued so Jong 1s that we
were totally right "
The U.S. team received two
warnings because or its protest
A third warning would have
eliminated the Americans from
the match.
McEnroe, the No. I-ranked
player in the world. never lost a
set 10 his three matches against
the Australians. including his
doubles effort with Fleming on
Suturday.
The 22-year·old Wimbledon
and U.S. Open champion was
unusually subdued early against
McNamara. losing his service in
the first game.
McEnroe came back to break
McNamara·s service in the
fourth game of the first set The
l wo held serve until McNamara
broke the American's service to
take a 7-6 lead.
That provided the incentive
McEnroe needed He won the
next three games, giving up only
three points and twice breaking
the Australian's service.
Mc Enroe was totally domi-
nant in the second set as
McNamara appeared confused
by the American's vast arsenal
of shots.
Seaver triwnphs
Pat Seaver beat out 10 rivals
for the Dodie Beek Gabboon
Sunday in the annual five-race
regatta for Lehman-12s a t
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
The Beek trophy is one of
several raced for during the Call
by the highly competitive
Lehman· 12 sailors.
Runner-up was Ken Seider.
third was Buz Tupman, and
fourth was Charles Beek
------·--
Orange CoaSt DAILY Pll,.OT/Monday, October 5, 1981 Cl
Golf with JACK NICKLAUS
From Page C2
\ HA.T,:. 10 PL.RY \N A.A\N GEAf',
e>UT IF l'lY\ A~SO~UTGLY FOP.CEO
TO I IV\A\.<6: SUP.E'. 1HER.• \$ PL...eN\Y
OF ROOM AROUND
THE ARM S~ CHEST
ANO SHOUL.ue:~~!, RS WE:L-L-A L.IGHT \N WE!..\GI T .
ALSO. I PACK A e:>I G UMe,R&LLA
A a~o SUPPLY OF
TOWELS.
PRO FOOTBALL ROUNDUP •••
passes to propel Tampa Bay to a 28-10 victory over
Detroit.
Three or the quick scores followed turnovers
by Detroit, which Cell to 2·3, while the Bucs re·
mained tied for first with Minnesota at 3·2.
Safety Cedric Brown picked ore passes by re·
serve quarterback Jeff Komlo, playing in place or
the 1n1ured Gary Danielson. and third·string
quarterback Enc Hipple to set up two quick Bue
touchdowns
Vikings 24 . Bears 21
BLOOMINGTON. Minn. -Tommy Kramer
threw touchdown passes to Ahmad Rashad and J oe
Senser as Minnesota built a 17-0 lead and then held on for a 24-21 victory over Chicago.
Hans Nielsen missed a 26-yard field goal for
Chicago a!> time ran out. The Vikings also had to
withs tand the three-touchdown performance of
Rea rs quarterback Vince Evans, who passed for two
scores and ran for another.
Fountain Valley High product Ken Margerum
caught a game-high 10 passes for 140 yards as Evans
threw for 307 total yards.
Biiis 23 . Colts 17
ORCHAHD PARK. N.Y -Joe Cribbs romped
159 yards in 17 carries. setting up both Buffalo
touchdowns. and Nick Mike-Mayer kicked three
field gOfls as the Bills defeated Baltimore. 23-17.
The victory imp roved Buffalo's record to 3·2 and
lengthened a Colts' skid to four games after an open-
ing victory ·
Buffalo quarterback Joe Ferguson passed 16
yards to Jerry Ruller for the opening score of the
gam e and ful~ack Roosevelt Leaks barged 1 yard
for another a the Bills opened a 14·0 lead in the
firsl quarte~
49ers 30, Redskins 17
WASJ11NGTON Safety Dwight Hicks ran 80
) ards for a touchdown after recovering a fumble and
returned an interception 32 yards for another score
to lead San Francisco 49ers to a 30-17 victory over
winless Washington.
The victory improved the 49ers record to 3·2
while the Redskin~ dropped to 0-5. their worst start
in 17 years . under new head Coach Joe Gibbs.
Hicks picked a Redskins fumble out of the air
five minutes into the game and raced 80 yards down
the sideline to give the 49ers an early 14 ·0 lead.
Packers 27, Giants 14
EAST RUTllERFORD. N.J . Quarterback
Lynn Dickey threw touchdown passes to Paul Coff
man and John Jefferson to lead Green Bay to a 27-14
victory over the New York Giants.
After the Packers capped their first drive with a
50-yard fie ld goal by 15-year veteran Jan Stenerud,
Green Bay relied on a passing attack led by James
Lofton and Coffman for their first touchdown at 4:38
of the second quarter.
John Jefferson, playing his second game with
Green Bay after being traded from San Diego follow·
ing his contract holdout. caught his 31th touchdown
in his last 47 ~ames, a 26-yarder from Dickey with
8: 48 remaining 1n the game. giving the Packers a 21·1
lead
Steelers 20. Saints 6
NEW ORLEANS -Quarterback Terry
Rradshaw lhrcw for just under 300 yards and two
touchdowns to lead Pittsburgh to a 20·6 victory over
New Orleans.
Bradshaw's touchdown passes went for 16 yards
lo ~ide receiver Lynn Swann in the first quarter and
47 yards lo his other wide receiver. John Stallworlh,
in the fourth quarter.
David Trout booted field goals of 25 yards and 43
yards in the second quarter
Oilers 17, Bengals 10
HOUSTON llouston's Carl Roaches bolted 96
yards with a kickoff for a touchdown and Earl
Campbell broke out of a three-game s lump with one
touc hdown and 182 yards rushing to lead the Oilers to
a 17-lOvictoryoverCincinnati.
Roacties. who had been close to breaking a kick
return on ~everal other occasions earlier, darted lo
his right and down the sidelines He escaped the
grasp of Bengal defender Mike Fuller al the 10-yard
line to take the wind from a Cincinnati rally
Seconds earlier. Bengal quarterback Ken An·
derson had hit tight end Dan Ross with a 13-yard
touchdown pass to give Cincinnati a 10·7 third·
quarter lead.
Largest sailboat show set
The largest all-sailboat show
ever held in the nation -the
13th annual Southern California
Sailboat Show will open its
doors at the Long Beach Conven-
tion Center Oct. 23 and continue
through Nov. l.
Hours are Friday. Oct. 23, 6 to
10 p.m .. Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 10
Lohman takes
Lido Regatta
Forty-one boats 1n five classes
turned out Sunday for Lido Jsle
Yacht Club's Fall Regatta sailed
over courses inside the bay.
The Lido·l4A and B fleets
were combined with a total of 11
entries . The winner was
Rowland Lohman, Balboa Yacht
Club.
In the Laser Class the winner
was Al Nelson, South Shore
Yacht Club.
Sabot A and B classes were
also combined with Al Nelson of
SSYC beating out a field of
e ight. In the Sabot C·l class the
winner was Leslie Fowler.
LIYC. and the Sabot C-2 winner
was Jimmie Warmington, NHYC.
Trophy winners in each class
Ll00-14 1 R-land Lof\men, BYC, t. P!Mil
Blank, ssvc. l Marty Looney, LIYC, 4. ~ Fulton, SSYC.
lASER -I °"' NtlJon, SSYC, t. S<otl Montoomery, UCISA
SABOT A & B -I Brian Nel-., SSYC, J E"' Proul. BYC.
SABOT C·1 -1 Lffile F-i.r. LIYC ..
S.llBOT C·l -1 Jl"""le WarmlnvtcNI, NHYC
p m : Sundays, 11 a .m to 7
p m . and weekdays 3 to 10 p.m
Admission is $3 75 for adults. SI
for c hildren 6 to 12. and children
under 6 free.
The huge fleet will total more
than 400 sailboats. ranging from
dinghies to the luxurious 55-foot
Jomar with a price tag or
$300,000.
The accessory displays . tradi·
t1onally one of the strongest
points of the show will number
more than 300. These include
everything that goes on a boat,
from anchors to windlasses.
Supplementing the boats will
be a wide variety of special
features, including appearances
by leading personalities in the
sailing world.
More than 30 of the boats on
display will be new designs. ac-
cordmg to show chairman Bud
Hartman. Included will be the
much talked about Hobie-33, the
first monohull created by Hobie
Alter. the Capistrano Beach
man who pioneered the small
ratamaran industry
Another first timer at this
year 's show will be Bill Lee's
Santa Cruz-50. an ultra-light dis·
placement craft that has been
winning distance a nd local
racers on the West Coast.
A strong international Oavor
will be provided by exhibits
from such foreign nations as
New Zealand and France.
There will be a s pecial trade·
only hours from noon to 6 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 23 and again from
11 a m to J p.m. on Monday.
Baseball standings
MERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
z-Kansas City
x-Oakland
Texas
Minnesota
Seattle
Chicago
Angels
W L Pct. GB
29 23 558
27 22 .551 12
24 26 .480 4
2'4 29 .453 51·2
23 29 .442 6
23 30 434 61'2
20 30 .400 8
East Division
y-Milwaukee 31 22 .585
Boston 29 23 .558 1 ,.,
Detroit 29 23 .558 11 2
Baltimore 28 23 .549 2
Cleveland 26 26 .500 41.2
x-New York 25 26 .490 5
Toronto 21 27 .438 7'i~
x-First-half division winner
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
y Houston 33 20 .623
Cincinnati 31 21 .596
San Francisco 29 23 558
x-Dodgers 27 26 .509
Atlanta 25 27 .481 71'2
San Diego 18 36 .333 151'2
East Division
y-Montreal 30 23 .566
St Louis 29 23 .558 12
x-Philadelpbia25 27 481 4...,
New York 24 28 .462 51"1
Chicago 23 28 451 6
Pittsburgh 21 33 .389 91;lr
x -First-half division winner
y-Second-half division winner
T I I
I
Angels fin-!
•
sollle pride'
beat TexaS. , • ARLINGTON, Texas <AP> t-
The Texas Rangers and Ute
Angels played out the string Jn
baseball's strange 1981 season
Sunday. The Rangers appeardd
to be going through the motions.
but not Angels' firs t basemqn
Don Baylor. :
"You have to look for person~!
pride inside yourself." sa~d
Baylor, who cracked four hilf.
drove in two runs and scor~
another in the 9·2 season-ending
victory by the Angels :
"If you're a professional," tte
continued. "you go out on lt1e
field for pride. even 1( you're tn
last place Other players will qe
watching you and you ought io
be watching your self. The la{it
day of the season is just like t~e
first day -you have to try "
Rookie right-hander Mike
Witt. 8-9, went the distance for
the Angels Texas starter Uin
Whitehouse. O·l. was knocked
out in the second inning of hJs
first major· league start
The Angels scored twice in the
first on Baylor's run-scoring
single and a throwing error by
Texas second baseman Mark
Wagner Rick Burleson drove In
two runs with a second-inning
single. bumping the score to 4-0 .
Brian Harper's sacrifice Oy in
the third inning and Baylor's
fourth-inning double produced
single runs for the Angels.
The Angels added two more
runs on singles from Baylor. Joe
Ferguson. Butch Hobson and
Steve Lubratich in the seventh.
Texas· firs t run came when
Bump Wills was hit by a pitch to
open the second , stole second,
advanced on a single by Leon
Roberts and scored on an error
by Downing 1n left fie ld. Billy
Sample doubled in a run in the
ninth.
SNYDER WINS
TENN/ CROWN
LONG BEACH Jim Snyder
of Costa Mesa was a winner,
while Newport Beach's Maria
Myers was beat en in their
respective title matches at the
Pernod California Tennis
Festival in Long Beach Sunday.
Snyder posted a 6·7, 6·3. 1·6
win over Glenn P etrovic of
Pacific Pahsades to capture the
men's singles crown. Snyder
needed an 8 ·6 win in the
tiebreaker to come out on top.
M yer s was defeated in
straight sets. 6·4, 6·3 by Angela
Walker of Toronto
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
IRAMD MEW
198t vw
DIESEL RAlllT
FACTORY STICKER
$7945
DISCOUNT
$950
SALE PRICE
'6995 t2634) (1 84699)
l'UMDHEW
1911 ISU%U
rtCtCUP
FACTORY STICKER
16471
DISCOUNT
. $613
A DAILY "LOT AD-YISOI
M2·U71 This Weeks Special y Second-half division winner
z-Clinch:!Clayoff berth '(•k-A..-h t, Teus t
s..le'r'•k-Mouston5.~l
Phlledtll>N• 2, Chkaoo 1
St. loulS 4, Pl~O
New YOfll J, MonlrMI 1
Clnclnnall a, Atlanta 0
SALE PRICE
(~2l7c,~i,,
Zillgitt and Wright
insur.1n11· Jl(rnt' .mcl hrol(rr.;
lnaurance premluma up thf• year?
Call us for a compeUlive quote
for Auto, Homeowners. Fire, Flne Arts.
Llfe, Medical, R V. Boat or Yacht Insurance.
NJ I 0,.1Ar '\rthur f\()ulrvAnl
Nr~rt lit"h. < .1 IJ/(;("4•
( 1141 /.,I ?O.,'J
I •
lattll'll«e S, N-Y-J lostoft •. Clfwl-2
Chk ... U, Mi-Mita 12
O.ttolt J, Mllw-.e i
Ot•ltllll 4, I(_, City J
s..tt••t. T..-o T ... .,.,._
Ktf'l .. t City 1$4111ftorlf 4.$ .... Wr ..... 1..JI 8'l
Clewtlalld IWlllU •t -OM!-J.tl, J. C II ..... , ,....,._ ... ,
San FrMCIKO 4, SM Ole90 J
(111-ltr Meton•Mtl llAHDHEW
1911 vw
DIESEL PICKUP
FACTORY STICKER
$1345
DISCOUNT
$1110
SALE PRICE
'7105 (2708) (114°498)
~ . . . .
" "
AMHICAN L.EAOUI!
Anaet• t , R•noer• 2 CAl.1"°61A T•XM ....... . ....... Or'4;11,tll • 0 I 0 , .... "' 3b S O O O ~NMft.U S I t 2 l"eQ ... lle,cl • I I 0 ...... 111ML1t ~ t I 0 $.Mnpl9 It S 0 2 I J•v1or.lil s 1•1 PvtR•m.111 so , o ••tv-.c • > I 0 JOllf'llOfl,C • o o o
H"-.Alfl • 0 I I •etl,dll I 0 0 0 lhfll4Wt1CI S I I I Wllla,ctll • I I 0
H•r'9f,n • I 2 I lt-rb rl • O ) 0 Lllllr1cll,Jll s I , I w_. :111 , 0 I 0
Norm•"·• J O O O T"'91t *t t \J f TtUlt • 2 10 I
k-'11 ...... C•llforrll• 221 100 >Ol-
Tuea 010 OOI 001-1
I!: -w.....,, H•'"'· ......... ,. OP -
C.llfoml• I, Tea•• I l08 -C.lllorN• 10. hses II 211 -8•ylor, s.....-Hll -._.. q.,., CJ) se -H•rper, Lut>r•tk ll, Wiii• SF
-Her-.
C•ll..... IP H It •• •• SO Wiii (W, l~t) t 10 1 2 3 S , ....
WhltthOvte IL, 0.1) 1".i t
l<err1 s • 4 Scllmldt 2~ J I 1 0
HBP -tly Wiii !Wlllt) T -2:tJ. A
1.~.
A't 4, lteyale J
Oeltlend 201 ooo t~ t o
K•nw• City 010 002 CIOC>-J • I
l(eouoti, UndffWood (f ), B .. ra ti) -
HHlh: Gure, 0..IMnberry tt) .rid Welhett,
Qulrlt. W-K-.oh 110..1. L-Gvr• (It .. )
S-BHrd UI HA-0.ltl•nd, Mc Key 1•1 A-2t,nJ.
Of' ..... s,Y-.2
New YOr1l 000 100 000-J I 0
Beltlmote Oo:J 101 00•-S 10 O
Reuschel. Mey UI, Goo~ t•I. Frufor
Cfl end <Anlne; Fiene-. St-rel 111 and
OempMy. W-FI...._, CM ). L-R-....
t•·•). S-S-el 111. HA-11411tlmore, Mvr
ro 1111, 0.Clnc .. t 13) A-Jt,1.,,
ll•S.1•,llMIYMI
&°'ton IOI 000 OIS-. ,. 0
Clevel-000 000 110-2 t f'
Tonez. BIH9meler 111, Aponte (I) -o.dmen. Denny, $.plllner Ctl -Heney,
llendp. W-Torrer 110.JI L Oeftfty 110.61
S AP.,,,te Ill. HA-lloston, Event J (22)
A-t,•14
TlfenJ,lt-•1 Detroit 200 000 001 -l 12 O
Mllw ... k• 000 002 000-J I I
Wiicox -P•rrl"'; Urch. CIAYlon I.,, Celd-11 (1), McClure ti>. Al>QVttlne (ti
•llCI MC>Ote W-Wlko• (lt·t ) L-AVQ<nllne
ll·71 . A U,26.l.
.,.,... Sea n, T-• u
Minnesota 000 OS.. 0»-IJ II t
Chlc990 101 tlO 044-13 14 J
Wllllems, Cooper UI, Vert.o.ven ttl,
Cort>ett t•> -LAudner; OoUon, Hlcuy
ISi, McGIOl...., UI, Farmer c.I, Pene,._.
Ill. Roblnton It ) end Flo, HIU. w-Aot11nson CH)) L-Corl>ell 11·•1 HA
Clll<eoo. Helr1ton Ill A-1,tU
~r!Mra 1, •111e Jayt t
Tor on lo 000 000 000-0 • l
Suttle 000 000 20•-l 4 0
TO<ld, Murr•y 111 end M•r11nea; a.,..
nlster. Re..,10 (fl end Bu Ill no w-
B•nnl1ter ( ... ) L T-12-11. S-Ae..,ley
ti >. HA-Seenle, BulllnQ U>. Pecloro cw
A-•,MS.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
A1tro1 5, Dodgers 3 HOUSTO. LOS A..Ol!LES ....... . ....... L041<h .<1 4 I J 0 Ses,lb J 0 0 0
ReynolCK,n 1 0 1 2 Perconte.?11 1 o o o
·AotiertJ.Jb 0 0 0 0 Landres <I 3 I I I
W•lllrlQ,rl J O 0 0 Cettlllo,p 0 0 0 O Avllle,p 0 0 0 0 GolU,p I 0 0 O Seml>Uo,.p 0 O O o Belter 11 t 1 o o sm1111,p 1 o o o 11r..:11ey,rl , o o o
Spltmn,lb 4 0 O O G•"'O.lb 2 1 o o Knicely,< 4 I J I Smith lb 1 0 0 0 Tolmen,lf 4 a o O Mer,,;•l,rl , o o o Gercle,Jb l 0 , 0 Mel-,lt I 0 0 0
Thon,u I I I 0 Ye-r.c l 0 I 2 Pe .... n I D 0 0 llusMll,U 2 0 I 0 Knepper .P I o 0 0 Welu ,u 1 o o o Cr111,p11 I I t 0 Thomn,Jb l 0 I 0 Wooos,rl , 0 I I HOOlon, p I 0 0 0
JoMsln.Pll I O O O Mltcllell,c1 I 0 0 0 Tot•ls JS S IJ e Tol•IS )0 3 4 3
k-lllyl-....
Houslon 001 010 on-s
LO• Angel.. 300 000 000-J
E Reynold" OP -Hous\Orl 1, L°'
An~ltt I. LOB -HO<lllon 7, Loo Angelfl J
JB -Tllotl. R-ns. HR -LAndrHUI 171.
Knlcely m. SB Loucu . s -....... SF -
Roberts. " ........ Knepper
Aullle
S.mblto
0 . Smith lW. HI
IP • J
' J
" It 1!11 •• so
4 J J 1 J
0 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 4
LHA~
Hooton 1 c .. 11110 o
Goltt IL. H I 2 S J
H8P -tly K-(Mersl\ell)
A -•1.on. ........ ,._I
' 2 0 0
J 0 1
T -1 11
Aller1t• 000 000 000-0 I 1
Ctnclllnell 100 100 oo.-> It o
8090s and Owen. Soto end o·e.,.y w-
Soto 112 .. 1 L 8-s ().IJ) A-Jl.1t4
-2.e.,..1 Montr .. I 000 000 001 I I I
New Y-010 000 01•-2 1 o
Gullkkton, 8urrls UI. BeMMn UI, Sow
It). Gorma n Il l •nel C•rter, R•mot.
Felc--Trevlllo. W-F•k-15-ll L-
GUlll<kson 17 • ., HA-•w Yori!, Hool•ll•r Ill A-1,61f
'°"'"letl,C-1
Cllk990 010 000 OC»-1 6 2
Pllll•delPll'-002 000 00•-J 4 0
Smith, Tldrow (1) •no J D•¥1s; M. Davit,
Rutll¥trl t•I, Proly 161. Lyle (7), R-tll,
McGraw tt> lflCI M<Cormklt. W-RV1'\veft
(ll-71. L-Smllll ().4). S-McGrew 110)
A-21,tU.
~·.~1u111t St. Louis 100 010 101~ I 1
Plttsburoti 000 ooo 000-0 • o
Shirley, Mer1lner 171, S.,ltH (t) enel Sen< Ilea, Brummer; Jono, L•• c.,.
Teltul¥• Ill -P.ne. W-Slllrley tM I. L-Jonet t ... S). 11-10,022.
Owllb•, PMr9tJ
San Ofo9o 002 000 010-J 12 s.n F, enc ltco 100 000 CU•~ I 2
Mure, u,,_ (7). 5llow Cf), Boone lfl, Lll-
lltlltld ti) -K--...,, GWOICl1. Le.,.lle,
Brelnlnt 131, Mlr11on It> -ll•ftlOl'rl. W-
8relnlno IHI. L-Sftow ti.JI. $-Minion Ull. A-lt,006.
Top 10
l._•l71e1Mta)
..,,..ltlCA.N LllAOU•
0 A• It " ~ LefltlWd, e.ttft '°' "' ., 1s. .m GlbMn, 0.Volt tJ !to 0 t5 .DI
Pecior.t., SNftte ·~ -to 1J2 .. C.C.._.,, Mi-• 1a. 416 10 1D .DD
lt,H....,_ Cell..._ 1GI OJ It 1*5 ..J1t
Ha,..,_, 09 .. ltlftd ta UI 44 IOI .llf
Zill!, SNltlt ~ >17 41 111 .Jll
Brett, K-Clt't' • kJ 40 * ..JIO Oltwr, ,,,.., lt2 421 SJ tJO .. .. _,, --• * u 110 -...,,.,,........, .... y-'° ,,, .. .. .• ..... _
Mvrray, ............ H ; 1!¥-, ....... tt:
orkll, ,......, D 1 A•"'9t, OAlll•M, n ;
Tllef!IH, Ml!WM!Mie, 21; L"1lr1.tlll, Cfll< ... , 21. ._ ...... ,.
Mvrrey, ............ 1': Armat, 0.11.-,
16; Oflllillt, Ml..__, 7'i 1!11-. hMlwl, 71; WlllfltN, Htw Ytl'tl, 61. ~"o.c .... ,
Cerntr, T••••• •·t: Y11tltov1c11. ........... , ... ; , ............. ,..,; ....,,.
Cllk .... "'*: O. Mfftlflef, ••tu-, 1..S;
Cletir, ........ W ; MCO,.._, .. "I_..,
IJ.S; Olll*Y ..... Y--. 11'5.
•ATM*M. L9~8
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........... Wftl • ·-.. , .. .., ......... IL~ .... ti 111 •
B•Hbatl ployoft1
NATIONAL L8AOl1• WHT
llH.0.Y ~ DGCIOt"•tHOv•-· ):IJp.m. WedMldey -OoOeen •t H-IOrl, 10:0S e.m.
Frld9y HollSIOrl at 0oo9e,.., l:Oj p.m
S•hmley -Hov•lon et C>odter\, S:U p.m.,lfneuuerr
Sundey -..._*' •t Oootett, 1 ·os p m., tr nee•~
NATIONAL Ll!AOUI l!AIT Wt~y Pt\lledelPl>I• 11 MotltrNI, 10'01 • m .
tllwrswy -""11-iplll• et Monl•MI. S Upm
Frkley --•Ml •I Pllll-~e, I .AS Pm.
S•lvrci.y -Mol'otr_.I el Ptl118"..,lt
IO.ose.m.,llneceswry '
Sund9y --tMI ti Pllll9dltlPllle, I.OS
P m . If necu.wry
A.MIAICAN LIAGUI wan f.,.wl•y 0.kl-el K•nw1 City. 12·10 p.m
Wed-y Oeltleno ..... ICenwt CHy
!site to be determined; II ICenYt City -.
le•b C1e .. 1-In -Of two .. _, _,, o•mt w111 tie •I Kenws City). 12 10
Frld•y -K•nw• City •I Oeltlenel, s 10 o.m
S.turao -K•nw 1 CllY ti O.ltleno, '' 10 p.m.
Sund•Y -ICenws City et Oeltl•nel. •: 10 p.m
AMIElllCAN Ll!AOUW !EAST
Wtdrlffdev -N-York •t Mllw ... 1r ... S.IOp.m,
TllurM!<ly Nt .., York •t Mllweu1t ...
lf• IOp m.
Friday Mll..,Aui<ff •I New Yorlc. S; 10 p.m .
S.turaey -Mllweull." et Ntw 'l'orlt, 1, 10 p.m.
Sund•Y Mllweull• •I New Yorlc, •· 10 o.m
All tlmeiPOT
All Wr!H t ft bttl-of.llwt.
NFL
Rams 27, Browns 16
k-'10...-... Clt Vtl•nd
Los Anoe•"
J 0 1 .._,.
Cit FG Jecobs 3S 1 I 0 t>-17
LA -TylerJ run tCon el II.IOI
LA Tyler I peu lrorn Heden tcorr•I
kl<lt)
Cit M. Pruitt I run (J.coos kKl<I
LA -Gumen •run ICorr•l ltkk)
LA FG (Otr•l 38
LA FG Correl 41
Cle -N_..,.,,., 31 P<"• trom Sipe lklel< l•lltd)
A ._,,'24
Cle F lrsl <lowns 11
Rutl>U·yer<l$ 2._11
P•Ul1>9 '(anJ> 240
Return yer<ls t•
Ptuet 1'4-zt.1
S•<kS DY I~ Pun ts s ...
Fumtll.,.losl 1.0
Ptn•lll~yerd\ 11•
Ttmt of PoHtiilon Jt 11 ,....,..._, S&ottlttlu
LA ,.
-.113
t'1
I
11-Jl.0
1-ID
J.40
J. I ,..
J3 C3
RUSHING Clewel-. M, Pruitt 11·5',
Whllt ... 12, G Pn.ltl 1·1, Hill I ·l, Sipe I Los
AnQelH , 8ry..,.t l .. '3. G..men l).W, Tyle<
11·2', Oftvwlrd 1·11. Heden t·16
PASSING Cle..iand. Sipe '-•JI.I UO.
Los A119tles, H-Jl.Jl~lOS.
A ECEIVING -Clt.,.1-, M Prultl ~.
Au<lter US, Ft-2·11. N__,,. J.s., G.
Prw111 •·•, Hiii '·'· Los Anoeles, O.nnero
I '°· Tyler ~s. W.addy J..13, G..men 2 IS Bry•nt J•t. Miiier 1-1. Chlld• 1... '
Steelers 20, Saints 6 Sc-., O..."'n Plltsburtjft 1 • O 1-10
New OrlHnt O ) J 0-6
Pitt -Swann 1' peu lrorn 8raclsll..., tTrovl ltk k)
P itt FG Trout JS
NO -FG Akerelo U
Piii FG Trout 43
NO FG Alctrelo J3
Pitt -SIAlllWOt'lh 41 PAU from Bradtllew (Trout kk k)
A -M,571
1..i¥ .... IS&ottltlk1
RUSHING -PltUburtjft, Herrlt !).St,
Poll•rd ll·Sol, D•vis J..t, Thornton M , Slloudl
1·10, HtWlllorne 1·1, Bredtllew 1.0. N-
Orluns, G ~s 2S.17, W Wiison M ,
HOlmttl.0.
PASSING -Pittsburgh, Bredslle..,
t .. Jt4-J1t. Stouot 0.1.0.0. Now Orleans, O.
Wiison 11-20+127, Scott 4-s+SO.
RECEIVING -Pllbbur1111. Stellworlll
7-15', Sw-. 1•1, Pollard MO, '"""""'*" J.)7, Devit I~ Hew one-W. Wll,... ._.,
Groth •·'2, H••d'I' J.t, Wllllams 2-20, ll'e•ktnt 1-10, HOI"'" 1.0.
Bucs 28, Lions 10 k_..,o. ..... Ott roll
Tempe ll•y
Del -FG Murr•y SO
10 0 0 0.-IO
~ u o 1-.a
Del -Scott s PASS ,,.,,,, Kornlo tMvrrty
ltl<kl
TB -HOVle II P•H from Wllll•mt ICepe<ekkk)
TB ~ House ll PUt from Wllll•m•
tCepeu1tlc1t>
TB WllcMr J1 PUS from Wlllltmt
!Cepeceltk lt)
Tll Otw-•'4:11 • peu from w111i.""
,C•PKt ltlck)
A 11,IJ3
I_..,.., Sutiattu
RUSHING -Detroit, Sims 24-11, Buuey .. u. HIPC!le ?~. Scott 1.0, Komlo l·ml""' I Tempe, Eclt-,,..,,,Owens 2·1'. Wlldltr
~17, WllllemtM ,Swlder l·mlnust.
PASSING -Detroit, Kornlo 1H.~2·1SJ,
Hipple •·lS.J.10?. Tempe, Wllllemt
U·:tt·1·161.
RECEIVING -Detroit, Scott ~'7, Hiii
J-46, KlrlQ ).7, Slml Ml, BvSMy 2·1, Hkllol•
I-St. L Tllompton Mt, Kena l·IS, T-
Wllder 4-45, Howse t ·40, T. 8•11 J.M,
Ee•-2.n . Obredovkll 1-4.
Broncos 17, R•ldere o
SC.W.llYO..Nn
Oenv•r O 1 10 0.-11
O•lllt nG O 0 0 0-o
Oen -"""'°" 4 IS1-lnfor1 ltlclt) 0... -FG Slltlntoo1 J 1
Oen -Perros 10 ,,.., t Stalnron 11IC1t >
A -Sl,Oi5
l,.........SUHln
RUSHING -Denver. Purot 1 .. 7J, Prttlo~ 21·10, Reed 1·17, C•r1•el• 1-J.
O•lllellCI. Klftll 1~u. Jen..., 4-11, Plwr\llett ,.,
PASSING -Mor1on, .. lt+117, O.e..v
•·t·0·24. Oot•n<l, l'lvnltett 1a.20.1-1u,
Wiiton 1•1.t.
lllCEIYING -Venvtr, C>Wma J.U,
Affd J·D, P..-ros l·t4, Motet M t, ,.......,.
1·11, E1110f11·14, We'-1·11. o.t.1-. Klnv
.._,., J.,...,, '"41, Aenaey, •1t. llr-
1.15, 8rAft<h l·I•.
499,. 30, Red•kln1 t7 1e-wo...-n
S•n Frtneltco 14 10 • II-JO
WHlllftflon 0 ) 0 1._17 sir -,._,.,,.., <llaflr 111c111
Str -HkltUOlumelle retum 18ellr kl<lll sr: -"o lhflr 4'
Wesll -1'0 Motele't' )4
SF -Oavlt l rvn lllellr kklll
5F -HkU » ll!ttrtetl'lltn ret11rr1 tkkll l•lfod)
Wlnll -NlllftS .. ,_. Nti1t'11 1-....,, llkl()
WHll -W~J""' C-...v lllclt) ~-Sl,M
I .......... ~. ltUSHINO -.... ,-,_, •• , Peltall Ma,
Onl1 IWlt, c:.e.t .. 11, £11i.tt >It. !...,
2·1, L.•WfWIK• .,, •• w ............... ......
U ·O , llllttcelf l •S, WHlllr1tter1 7-M, .,.,.., __ ,_,,
~ASSING -Sell ~r-1-, llllMteN U •U •1U·I. WHlll119te11, Tllehme1111 1..U.11W, l'lldl 1N»UW.
••c11v1..c; -..., l't"-1 ... •ni.n ..... ....,_ .n. v-. >M, Olnc l-tt, C-r ,.._ ....,.,..., we....,. .... , ......... ...., M4,. ,,__.,. Ml.
W•llter J'2t _._ Nt, ·-Mt, McO.,.Mt
J9ta 21, Oofphln• 21 ..............
Mt•Yen• U t I l4 ...... Mleml r r 1 1 .._. NYJ ..,_wmU_lt_T __ (........,
\10)
MIA l"r...-llr1 t NII (-k..._
kick!
NYJ w ..... t 11tW 1.-f ... (L.Mfly
Ilk kl
MIA -.... t -1•9191 ll1'9tll 1-S<l\e.meM lllclll
MIA err-1111 I Nft I-kl\e-
llkkl
NYJ w~••-f-r.-.1~ 11.10)
MIA -MIOtw n .,..,. ,.....,. $1rtO c-
klle~M ltk•>
NYJ -II "-M""f,.,,, f'°"' IL.Hfly 'k ill)
A -... m
·~ ......... llU$HING -Hew VOf'tc, McNell 1Wt,
Herper IU1, ..._ .. yn .. lt 1..aa. LMlt WI,
NtwlOfl ).ll, Olerttlfto 1-7, T.., M . Mltlnl,
Prenltllr11W7, w.tdlty 1-lS, 0 ..... irl .. t·•
V!oocite Mt, "-II"'• 5troo t.mlflua ._
PASSINO -H-Yert,, TtcN ..,..141G.. Miami, WllMlt't »6-17, Sl.-.Clll 1•n+m.
IU!C.IVINO -Ntw Ytl'tl, WeMt., •112,
HU'9r J.a. Lono .. It, Newtorl a.1>, ltirltllnl MS, Oeffney U O, I .. JeN. 1-», 1. • .._
l·U , A11911ttynl91t Ml, TocN M . Ml-',
Moore 1·210, Vl1141rlto ,.)0, Herrlt a.n,
He•4'Y t•tl. It-I t , Olequlftto '""''""''
ow.,.. 17, 8~1 10 IC_..,
Clnclr1netl > o 1 0.-10
HOU'1on 0 1 r >-17
Cln -l'G llne<ll tS H041 -Cempbell 2 rilll I FrlUcll ltlclt)
Cln -ll•u ,, P•U lrem Arlel9•-(8ret<ll ltklll
Hov -ltoec"91 • ltk Ufl r.tvrr1 Cr: l'ltKll
kl< kl
HOU FG Frltscll 41
A 44.1'0
.-. .... 1~. RUSHING -Cln< ...... 11, Jollrl_, ,,.._
Aluender .. ,., Aneltrton, ,... Hovtl.,.,
C•mpOell JMl2. Wll-M, ArmSINMIQ 1.1,
Colemen M
PASSING -Cln<lr1ntll, Arld•rton
>o.S2·1·2'0, "-Ion. SIMI!.,, 1~.
RECl!IVING -Clnclnn.11, Aoss ..... Ale .. ndtr M4, Colllntwortll 4-Jt, t<retotr
J.lS, J"""-).12, M<IA911y 2·21, Griffin 2 17, Mtr<., Mt. Houston, C•mllOell 1·3.
Biii• 23, Colt• 17 1c-•yo..t111t" 8elllmore o J o 14-17
Bull•lo 14 o l t-23
Bull llutler 16 PAil from Ferouson 1Mlh ·MAY9r kk lt)
Bull l Hb 1 •un IMlk .. Meyer ltlcltl Bell -FGWOod32
Bull FG Mlk•Mever ~
8•11 CMr • PtU from J-• (W-ltl<lt)
!luff FG Mite-Me-44
Bvtl FG Ml-•Me.,.r tS
B•lt -8Ulltr 14 pen from "-• !~ kkk)
A 71.111
1.-v ..... 1 Su tl"k' RUSHING ll•lllmore. Dickey 10.1&, Frenll.lln 12·•. Diilon ._10, McMiiian l·I.
8ull•lo, Cr._ 11-lff, M<Cvt<-t~. LHU).1
PASSING -S.lllmort, J_, 1l·»-1·11S,
llull•lo, ,,_ 14-Jt.M•
RECEIVING 8•111more, McCauley
5·21. C•rr t-+I, Dl<ltey ,_., Buller >,S,
Frenklln ).U, Dixon 2·24, Bvrlle 1·11, M<Cell
I .. ll11flalo, Butler 4-ll, Cribbs ).JO, Br-.
m•r J.11, M<Cut<-J.J7, Lewi• 1·16.
Vlklng1 24, Be•r• 21 1c-cwo.e"'" Cllk•llO o 1 1 1-JI
MlnnetoU 10 1 1 ~1•
Minn Brown I runt o ....... i.r klcltl
Minn FG 0-meler 4J
Mlntl -ll•WW>d II pass lrom l(r......,
tD•nmtfor ltkk)
(Ill a..c:""-t 1' peu lrom EweM (NltlHn klOI
Chi Ev.,.t•runlNlelMnltlckl Minn $triter II PHI from Kremer
( D•nmefor ltk kl
(Ill -B•Kllneoel I PAU ''°"' Ev•M ( Nl•IHn ltl<k)
A 0,12.7 ,,... • .._t s .. Vllkt
RUSHING Clllceoo. PeylO" , .....
E•t nt ).23, S....y •11. Mlnnei.ote, 8,_
14·'1, Yovng 1·Jt. G .. brHlll >-S.
PASSING Clllcego, Event t'-41-301
Mlnneto!AI, ICrtmer :!G-»l·Jll
RECEIVING -Clllc•oo, Mu9erum
10·UO, 8•scllnegel Mt. Wllllemt 4·21, P•Ylon 2·:13, A-f'»I! 1-lt, E•rl 1-t, ~y , ••• lar>eten I 1. Mlnner.ote, Young ~. s.
Wlllle s-44, R•sl\ecl ....0. Brown ... ,.. StnM<
J.)O
Cudlnals 20, Cowboys 17
k ... two.t111tn Delles 7 J 7 0-11
St. Louis 10 0 I )-JO
SIL -Morrlttn;n IO'~ltkltl
D•I Dorsett""' (Septlen kkll.I
St L F G O' Donoe11ue It
Del -FG Se91fon Jt
SIL Green 30 pen lrom Herl
IO' OonoQtlla ltk k I
Del -Oorvn) I pass I ram Wlllle IStl)flen
klc•>
SIL
A
F G 0' l>oflolll>ue 37 •t,m
t..i ..... 1sut1etk1
RUSHING -Oellu, Oortett Jl·H ,
Sprlr19s 10.Jt. White 2·1. St. LcNIS, AnOt,_, 10-n, Monl•S.H, Mllcllell J·ll, Stief ....
PASSING -Dellu, Wllltt IS-11-1-112. SI.
L041ls.Hel'1 t•Jt.1.1tt.
RECEIVING -Dalles, Johnton S-101,
OorMll '-ll, Miii 2·21, Pe•rton MS, J~
1·1', Sprl~ 1 .. , OUPrH 1.0. St. LOUI• G,_.
S .. t, Tiiiey }-7), Gr•y ).1', H•rrtll J.I,
M.,\11 1 •JO.
Patriots 33, Chlef1 17
k>W9WO.._,..
KAnMt City 1 0 J 7-17
Ntw Enoi.nci 1 1 10 ._,,
HE -H-beelt llpess lrom C•¥~
CJ. Smith kklll
KC -H ..... I"'" I~ kk ll)
HE -C...AM11911 I,,.., (J. Smith kk ltl KC -FG L-.y U
HE -FG J. Smith SO
NE -Collins IJ run CJ. Smith kick)
KC -o.1-y It non (Lowety lllcll)
NE ---'4P•nlromJ oflnlOft tltl<ll
l•ll•d)
HE -l'GJ.Sfnlllle3 A Sj,t:JI ,_.._. Sutlttka
RUSHING -Kentel City, o.t_., 1•101, Hednot l...S, Mcl(r11Q11t 1·16, K._y HS, 11.
Je<kton l·J, Blff-t.0 Ntw El'lglend,
c o111n1 , ..... Fero..., "42, Tatvov ).U,
Cevenaugll HO, Cunnin911em 1-16, Calhoun
.. 12.MoroenMO
PASSING -Kenses Clh . Ke11ney
t·JO.).IOI, "'9"'1911 0.1-1.0. Ne"' Enol9fld,
C•••ne ... I0.1'"1·162, JOIVI-1·1.0.....
AECl!IVING -Kenws Cltv, Scotl J-4.1,
J.T. Smllf\ 2·23, Men/Wiii 2·22, H-1-12.
0.leMf 1-1. New Er1111.no, Moroer1 4-111, H.
J•<ltson 2·11, HAtMll>ecll l•U, hlupu 1~1.
Penny-II 1.12, Collln1 l·S.
P1tck•r• 27, Gl•nte 14
s... cw°""""" Grffft B•y
NY Gl•nb
Gii -FG Slenerucl SO
I 10 P r-v 0 0 1 ,_,.
GI -Colfme r1 1 PHt from OlcUy IStenervd llk lt)
Gii -FG Slener\OCI lS
Gii -Huckletly I"'"' (Slienefvd kick) HY -KC!Ur I""' 10....lollklt)
G8 -Jen.r-,. P9H fr-Okllty
151-udltk lt)
NY -Grey 2 !NM from Slmntt t~ ltk kt
A -7J .... . ........ ~.
-.vsHING -Gffln 8ey, l!llt. , .. ,..
HuOlfty ... T--'°"· ..... Y"' K•I., t->I, ....,,., J.1, ll1tflt 2-2, Slf'rlmt M.
PASSING -Grnr1 8•y, Dickey liN2·1·~ 1!1111 HO.n N.-y~ ~ io-»•l»I.
RfCflVINO -0-ky, CllftmeA HI.
Lofltn S-7S, Jelltrt•11 141, 11111 J-1•.
HVCkltlly 2·11. NtW Yerk, errlecM S.7>,
Ptrltlnt ._.., IC-.. IO. lrtofll N2. Of..,
J-27, Ml ... "14, Slllrt. l·S.
TeauOoen t ............ ,
•·1111 .-...... ~ ., .... ,...,._.. hf\(......._, w.-,,..,.,....... ...
---'llflf.11>.D ., .......... Jim ~ata.• ........,,._.. Cr•la ,._..,, tl&MO .,..,...,,._ ..
a.llW .. IN,11,'1J ....... ,..._DO
Tom Kl ... tu7, .... ..,.,_m
OOft L.tvlll, .... ,,, '14141-4'-m
Torn Pv"-r,tl,HO ....... Uf....171
Wayne l..evl. ".UO .... 7~ ....., c~. tu10 ....,..,..71-«n
Tim SI"**" ... uo ....w1.n-m 011 Mef'Bll\.M,UD ... 7NM6-Va Sii ......... M,SJO 71 ... 11..,_,,,
Tlfftmy Ye4en(lne, '4.HO ...._71*-211
Oery M<C.d, .. .UO ... ,,~
Tim Non'I .. M.UO •1~>-.tn
Miiie svmwan. suu ... 71-7047-V• Georoe---. ts.Jn ..._~,,. •noce O.vtln, SUIS l'O " .. 11t f14 Lft TreWlo, ts.VS 7 l ...... 1·'2-274
LWff\ lt-U, U.J20 ....,·71*-115
0-.. Ad9f, 52.DO •'47·11*-US
Jim T11orpe, P.J10 ... 14-11·'1-l1S
Vtft<e H..,_, SI.DI ........ 11-27$ Jim l linonl. Q,aao ,..,.,,71..,175
lt ... r MellMt, U.DO ........ '2-fJS
Fred C........, Sl.6» 70-46-IUS.--17• E41~.11...,,. 71-41-7141-276
8ruce °""91...,. 11,tti. ...... 71*-17• J• ,,.,...,.., .,... '7·l'O-*l'O-J76
8•94 ....... , .. » .,.,......,...27.
Miiie Smltft $1,U. ~'2-17•
Jolln M~ .... 11.IM ... 10-7Hr-m
Merit o·-·· ''· 1w ... 10-10.10-m '°"''"' A~CKk, $1,ISol n ... 11 .. t-m Mlh lltld,$1,IM ... 104 .. 10-Jn Cll9rlet~. $t,IS.. •wM >-'2-277 MerltH• .... 11.IW ,~ .. n-m
Brvce Lletllle, '1, IS.. W.71-41 .. S-177
Keltll F•,.._, *' 1~1...,._m
Fwrul Ftner, llOI ... 10-11*-'171
Miit• McCUllouQll, ...,, ... 11 .... 11-m
Merit Pfell, llOI 12-64-10-11-m
Bill Brl11on, *' u-11'*11-m
Jim 8ooro., '410 1o.t1-1s..1-m
lloO llyrntr1, '410 ... 10-1t*-17t
Curtlt Str.,,.., MIO 7..,._10.70-17t
Dnld E-oe. '410 ... 11 .... 11-m
Jolln Sc~. MIO ~12-m
WOOCly llteclltlvm. $.SS7 t"*1).10--
M9rlt Aetill, W7 '1·12-11·11>-*
Jeclt Ftreni. un n .. 1.ro.11--
0on Pooley, US1 70-47·11·72-• Mlk• 0-lcl, $.SS7 12-41 .... 12 __
Lenny WedklM, S.SS1 11 .. 1.10.12-• Mn .. ,..........,,un ,...,....,._.
Tarry ,.__, US1 11-1S--•
Tomm., A.Mon, UJO ... 7"1>4t-Jtt
8ot>t>Y Cde, ~ .... 10-12·10-•t
Mllte Holl-, $.SJD ....... n.1>-J11
M•rk Lye, u u 10..1.1l-n-m
SlanlM AllQiell. S.SU 10-6t-7).ll-Ja
An C.ldwelt, Ult ... 10-71-14-Ja Joe Hegtr, Ul2 71 .... 7)-72-JM
O.A. Welllrifte, $.502 61*7H4-JM
Pflll H•rlCOCk. M92 11'*'7).7S-•
Tom J-. $4'2 1~1HS--• Sten Metny•, ~ 72-41·71-IS-Jtl
Cll•rles l(r.,.kel, .-0 7(Mj).77·1t-2t2
X-WOft Pl•roff
PGA T88m Ch1tmoton1hlp1 ... ,..,,...., °"" a.Ceponl·Wl>l'-'th, t21,t00 •7......_aJ
Cerne•·R-ln, $11.ICIO •k1 .. 1-m
Ce lllMN>-Mc.Allll1Aor, $1.IOO ...,......_,...
M .. MY·P91..-, $7.IOO ........_204
Alcott-v .. -. u,eoo , .. ,~
Oenlel·Stecy, U.200 11-10-ll07 Ke1rnle""l--~kh, M,700 10.7W.-•
H•VO·LundQulat, M,300 71-4Mt-M
Oellty·AelrNrdl, IJ,4t0 ... 10.11-210
8errow-O'Brlen, P .4'0 ... 10.72-tlO
Devit C-•·Stfwl, IJ,.., 71-•M2-2IO Hlll·Wllklnl., IJ,..., .,_7u.-J10
Mvreoll•P9111. t2,MO 71 .... 71-Jll
Cll9mberllr>-Mo<w, U ,tte> ... 11.12-111
A1ta.c1a111, ti.-r1-11H1-111
JoMson-W•lton. $1,-1,..._71-212
Heynfo·McMullen, 11,.. 11-72..._212
Meltterlln-MoxMU. 11.-n.n..,._1u
BrlU·H.,_, $1-11-1~111
Btrtol•«lnl-Unte, 11,l» 11-70.12-flJ
Fereon..JO¥Ce, 11..J» 70.11-72-21J
St•onev·Wl>Od. 11.m ... n .n -2u
Mllter-Str.,._. Pvn. $1.07• '2·10.12-114
Ad9ms·St-leld, 11.0H 6t-71·7._tu
Ferro-Kl"IJ, $1,074 1).4 .. 12-214
Owyer·S.-•. $1,07• .,.,....._JI•
Blltfelne!MilOQlnt, $'10 l...._12-JIS
IC•rr·Ae~ '"° 11°1).71-tlS lltelo<k-<:ottt. SttO n-1..,._,11'
Mer11n·Smllfl 70.12·1S-Jl7
Cet..O.y.Cr-r 11·1•11-111 Hffslorl·~on 1).1 ... 10-111
Moor• T ellor 14-7).70.-21'
llrown--11-1 .. 1>-11'
H•n<l·Hlrew 7•7'"7>-211
B•rr•ll·ltuDIFI 11·1 ... 'l-t1'
Aorer·TOUINn 74-7>-l>-ZJO X-won pleyofl
•• ~~· -·
Can.Am Challenge (et1t1--...1
1. Al Holbert, W•rrlnglOll, P• .. CRC·J
Cllevrol9', 60 leps.
J Jeff WIJOd. LOI Angtlft, C.rl HN I Lola
T»0,601-.
J, Tom Kl•ualer, Nor111•111e, Mich .... ltpl.
4 Ren<ly Lewlt, HllltbO•t<iOh, Ce ll!.,
Cribari c.t.C·l, S1 IACK.
S. Jolln Monon. El S.00-, Freu!>ee. J7 lef>$.
6. Mlkt A.lien, Le V-. Miiie Allon Lele m ,st1aps.
1. Gr-.. M<A•. CollAI Mew, Clrcoa Clrcvs GMt, 5' 1-.
I . Jolln Gvnn. Ml•ml, Fie , Gvnr1't Goocllet Lola.,.._
t . Rk l\erel G<ilder, Ben ~. C.111.,
Ellt• Marci! H•l'1. 5' 1<1$>t
10. Tim Ev-. Ho<lhvlll•, Ml<ll., Red AOOfs Ck ... , SS 1-.
11. Mlc,,_I Braylon, Ar1911elm. L.A w.
B•ayton, 54 1-.
12. J-True....,., Amllr1, Olllo, Reel
AOOfs Atll H•t1, 4' IAjK.
ll. Gaoff llr*'tm, SM Clernenle, T..,..
VDS,411 .....
u . Biii BleckledQie, Fort L•udtrd9 ... P'I•.,
Rell G T·2, 1J 1-.
IS. Tto Febl, Mllen. lt•ly, lludwel-
Mtrch. 211-.
1'. Bobby A•h•I, Glen Ellyn, 111.,
Budwel-"'9rcl>. It lac1t.
11. Aol>tl Wo11rln11. Roaollle, C•lll .•
Western Fl"I Lola, 1• l•Pt.
11. c;.,.,. Peyvl1, PllOenl•, Lola, J lept
lt. Denny Sulllven, L0<1levl11e, G.,vln
Brown FrllOee, 2 •-·
Me"llln Of vktor't': 1.00I teeoncb.
Aver ... ......,, 119.Jtl inllfl.
Time of rtKe: One'-', 1' mlnulff, SOMI seconcta.
OokTrH ... ._ ....... ,
IUNOAY'S •HUt.n u .......... ,, .. __....,
,.11t1T1t.ACa.•tw...._.
SUll•hlne lteom (MCCert.,.I J ot t.• t M
Pltml"f I* ... <SMM11e) • ot UO Slle't a T-(Wlfll-1 SM
AllO rece4: J.I 't O•utllt•r. Oellcle,
Deer l're.Khy,Al'l'fte o.. "••"9 OelltM. T lme• I IOJ/S.
HCOtllD •M;S. ·~ fvrlon9•. Vlklng H\dller l l"lncayl 1.40 •OO UO tuH1o•fft(Ot~MYtl uo uo
ll*Y'• Low tSlbllfo) 6,00
Also rtlCACI: ,.._ Dvlte, ~·, Tt*r
Or•y, Hltll E.,nlr\Ot, LIOlltnlr19 •ec1t, e-
pe•lor Jafln.
Tlmt ! 1.1UIS.
U DAILY OOU•LI <~11 paid U'J JO
TMltlD ltACa. • tvriOftts.
Av ... ltlon (GelllterlO) f «> UO U0
l"rompt Gel tOllvefftl s 40 •AD
JtMller 1 .10.lellollneye) UO
Alto •Heel. HI Tami, Our DHllrl't',
N•lu••ll'f Goed, lloy•I WlndUwm. 9«· rowed Meld, "-'Y l..edV. 5-tiv OM Tlmt 1·11111
P:OUllTM llAC•· One mile
M11lle•lfto t l"lrluyl f,00 4AO "° Miii Str-.. (Mewley) JM MO
Sm11119fo,., Gold t~ektr) ,_ ..
Alta raced St•ndup Comedian, si..ov
CtrMr, CMrle't Ttr1
flmt I J1111
"'"'™ llACI!. I~ mllet l1urll. TrvOI09d !WlnlMICI) S.10 2.llO 1.40
Aoclt Sofll'r tMerqveJ) J .20 ) 60
h jtel (~lier) J . .C
Alto r.c.ci: Welllem G•-. l<lclt. An Htlr Al>OVI Him, Viti~ Pole, Pocket Men, llollt Royce
Time 1 ... S/S U l!XACTA t._S) paid Ml.00
SIX TH •ACI!. Uurtonos.
Wellely's Wonder tOr1t0•I 1.60 •.oo i.oo
Vltet Force tLlphem) ,,.., J.llO
Soll"91 AOlo IM<Cerronl UO
Alto r•<ed: TOU<lly, F19ure1M9CI, Kllellt
Dully, A-t John, Ooublt FluN, Meflt•t HOtltH.
Tim•: 1:12 4/S,
SWYINTH •ACI!. 1111' mllft.
Splnou t Pineo I •.oo s.oo J.JO
Bleck Hood (T-) 10.«> 4.10
OtllClyWltl~seye) J,00
Alto r8'41d: 8ofl Cour91141, Prince WCH111y.
No Shrll\ll$.
T Im• I CJ llS.
U UlACTA 12 .. 1 paid Utt.SO.
U ~IClt SIA 12·M ·6+11 ~Id $9, 1 ... 00
w1111 If wlnnlno tklt•h Ula llorSHI u Pk •
SI• conlOl•llon paid 1103.eo wllll IJO WIMfrlQ
lkltel• 111 ... """")
llOMTH Ill.Cl!. I I/It mllet. Pro or Con (Hawley) >O.• t .00 •.10
Nonllern F-l~melterl J .llO 2 . .0 G•ltter Hitter 10.1-s.t.tywl 2,llO
Alto recte1· Fancy Hellrtr•, Shimmy. II• l•'I OellQM, Le •-••. O.Ce~lve. Time : I CJ
NINTH llACI!. I 1/1' mlles.
SKy Yarde< tOel-..Swye) 10.10 S JO 1.00
F••nch Aeoelf• 10r1eee1 •.oo uo
Kllelmert tPh>eey) J.20
Alto rectCI: Summer SAiior, Noors OyNl$-
ly, Annlet L.ertt, Pert,..,, In Tues
Time· I C3 l/S.
IS I JlACTA tl·ll pekl 191.SO.
Alte-e·Jl,610. -
W•ter polo
COU.EGI tat ~Me.-Mltllll
UC I.WO."· use 4 use > o o 1-4
UC Irvine J 2 • s-u uc •••IM sawlfto. v ... oes 1. c11oq-
o 7. Rllt y J, Cempbell l , Mu-alt 2.
Rober'-' I. M<Connklt I
Davis Cup
SeMlflottl9 , .. ~.On.)
SI .....
John McEnroe (U.S.) def. Ptl•r
M<N•"'9•• .. ,. Ml; Roscoe Tenner (U.S.) def. Mef11 Edlnondson U , .. 2. 6..J. (U.S. de-ftelt Austrelle, S.Ol.
let9-Alres,A,......la•)
JoM Lula Cler< (llrgentln•I def. B ..... r
Mollrem 1-S, •~; Gulllermo VIies tAroen-
lln•I def Alcllero L.awlt Ml, .. l. I Argent Ille dtlHls Brit.in,~).
Madrid Grand Prix
(et~~) si...., ...... ,
Ion L--· PMl!oAmey•W .._, t.J 0-...ri.tl ••
H•nt Glleletntltttr·Andrtt Gomn dtf. Tomu Smid-NI Guntllerd .. ,. u , 6-J
Maul Cla11lc
tetl(..._...,M_ell) . ...........
Htnk Pfl11 .. -. TlmMe~t•M,M.
C>eolllil9e f'IMI
Tony Grel\em-Mett MllCM ll def. Jofln
AIO•ncltr·Jlm D<ll•,.Y ,.., W , 1 ....
Men'• tournament
(et A.....,,,, N-.... , , ...... ,. .....
Gent Me.,... -· ,, .. N•IU• ... ,. , ... M IM•ur wins M0,000; NeslAlae ... tna U0,000>.
Women'• tournament
tet•IMml ... ,MIM,) ...... .. .....
Mtr11"9 N•vralllove def. Trec:y A"'lln t.o,
.. , C H evr et I love wins 'il.0001.
Parnod F••tlval tetL.emelNcll) .......... ,. .....
Jim Snyder (~t• Mewl def. o .. ,..
Pttr,vk IPmcllk l>etlst*sl ._, 1~71 w p IH I. • • '~ ._.,$ ...........
Ar1011e Welker tToret1tol Clef. Merle
M'(tMI l"'-19Mch)M ,W ,
Baseball
now gets
• • 1nterest1J1g
From AP dlspatc:he•
Forget about the records, Lbe
aspllt seaM>n , the strike and the
ract. that two or baseball's be.at
teams won't even be there. It's
time for the game to get in·
teresting again -the playoffs
are here .
The best ·of-rive divisional
playoffs open Tuesday in the
hom e city of the second-half win·
ners. The Kansas City Royals
host the Oakland A 's in the
American League West, while
the Houston Ast.ros entertain the
Los Angeles Dodgers in the Na -
tional League West.
The series in the East start
W e dnesda y with the
PhiladelJ)hla Phillies traveling
to Montreal lo play the Expos
and the New York Yankees
meet ing the Bre w ers at
Milwaukee.
The final three games of each
series will be played in the cities
of the first -ha lf division winners
with the possible exception of
the Oakland·Kans as City series.
THE ROYALS finished the
second season just a half-game
ahead of Oakland and the A's
could repeat as d ivision winners
today if Kansas City drops a
doubleheader to the Indians in
Cleveland. Oakland would then
host games two through five.
But that possibility isn't mak·
ing Oakla nd Manager Billy
Martin any happier .
·'The pennant s hould have
been ours five days ago and we
should have won it We should
have had a bye. no question
about it ... Martin said. "They're
not even a .500 club It's a break
for them. I think it's a black eye
for baseball."
The Royals. who finished the
season with an overall record of
49·53, will s ta rt right-hander
Dennis Leonard, L3· ll, against
the A's Mike Norris, 12-9.
. TH.E BEST opening game
pitching matchup will probably
be in Hous ton , where the
Dod gers will send out rookie
sensation Fernando Valenzuela.
13-7. against Nolan Ryan, 11·5.
who no·hit the Dodgers nine
days ago.
• · 1 • m glad to see us open at
home." Ryan said. "I look at it
as a plus. I feel we 're capable of
winning at home."
Valenzuela, the portly Mex-
ican lefl ·hander who dropped his
last three derisions. said he
wasn't nervous about the game.
"I 'm going into the game with
a lot of confidence. I'm well
rested. I feel I'm s till on top of
my game."
The Astros suffered a serious
loss Friday night when pitcher
Don Sutton broke his kneecap in
a freak accident while attempt-
ing lo bunt in a game at Los
Angeles.
"I DON'T FEEL there's any
more pressure on me because
we lost Sutton." said Ryan. "But
we did lose a quality pitcher, a
guy who"s capable of beating the
Dodgers and knows more about
them than anybody else around here."
Philadelphia will send three-
time Cy Young award winner
Steve Carlton , 13·4, against
Steve Rogers, 12·8, in the NL
Eas t opener as the Phillies go
after a second straight world
championship.
·:w e know whoever we played,
we d get a good game ... said
Phillies Manager Dallas Green.
"Montreal's pitching is ahead of
everybody else's. H you pin it
right down, probably ahead of us .··
The Expos, who lost the NL
East title on the last weekend in
ea ch of the last two years say they're ready. '
"WE'VE BEEN waiting for
this, and it's taken so long t.o get
here that I think we have the
momentum to go all the way "
sa id Gary Carter. Montreal0's All -star catcher.
The biggest problem both the
Phillies and Expos may face is
the weather in Montreal, where
temperatures reached a high in
the low 50s Sunday.
''Hey. the cold is tough on
their team , too. even though
they're from MontreaJ," said
Green. "You never get used to
playing in that weather."
The Yankees, who finished the
second half of the season under
500 at 25-26, will send Ron
Guidry , 11 ·5 . against the
Brewers' Moose Haas, 11-7, in
the ope ner of the AL East series.
New York's Lou Piniella said
the second season was tough on
the Yankees.
UCI rolls past use poloists
UC frvlne abowed a balanted
scoring attack and abut out USC ~urlng the middle quarten and
went on to potl a 1~ victory
over the Tr0Jan1 Su.nday iJl
water polo actloa at Newport
Harbor Hlcb.
John Varpa and D1aa JtileJ
1cored tbr" toa.la aplne to
1parlr the Aateaten wbo are
now ~ OYerall. UCI will be ID
Palo Alto to face 9taalonl iild
Santa Clara lllla ~
..
~ . .. ..
• "!
...
,, ..
.:·
.,
1,
•• ..
.. .. :. ..
" ..
·-:
)
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 5. 1981
FV hospital seeks
more volunteers
Narmco decision studied
The South Coast Air Quality
M anaaement Dlalrlct bearln1
board will reconsld r a Sept 8
declJlon grant1n1 N arm co
Materials Inc. of Costa Mesa
temporary exemption from a
pollution rule.
not requiring some reduction in
chemical emissions at the 600
Victoria St. plant.
should be moved out by Jan. 1.
The permit Issued Sept. 8 calls ,
for Narmco to continue seeking
m ethods to r e duce solvent
emlssion from curing towers in
Costa Mesa.
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital ls now accepting ap.
pllcaUons from adulu and teen·
agers lnterested In Jolnlng the
hospital's volunteer and Candy
Striper programs.
Upon acceptance, volunteers
will go through tralninl and
orientation programs. then will
work under the supervision or
hos pital staff members.
Fire stations
offering tours
South Orange County fire s ta-
tions will host open houses Oct.
10 t o commemorate Fire
Prevention Week.
Stations in South Laguna,
Laguna Nigue l , San Juan
Capistrano, Capistrano Bellch
and Emerald Bay will be open to
the public from 9 a.m. to 4 ~30
p.m .
Services provided by volun·
leers include staffin& reception
de s k s, w or king In the
laboratory, medical library and
pharmacy. assistinl nurses by
passing food trays and runnin~
errands. transporting patients
and helping patients by reading
to them , writing letters for them
and watering their flowers.
AduJt volunteers also will help
supervise the hospit1tl 's Candy
Stripers. Teen-agers must be at
age 14 ~ or older to join the Can-
dy Striper program.
Memberships also are open in
the Fountain Valley Hospital
Guild, which staffs the hospital's
main lobby reception desk and
operates the gift shop.
To apply for a volunteer post
or to obtain further information,
call Susan Davis. the hospital's
volunteer director, at 979-1211,
ext. 569.
Abortions nixed
WASHINGTON (A P > -The
Reagan administration said it is
changing the health insurance
pla ns of fed eral workers to
drastically curtail abortion cov-
erage for them and their depen-
dents .
HONORED -Former Presi-
dent Jimmy Carter has been
presented the Georgia Busi-
ness & lndustry Associa-
tion 's 1981 award for dis-
tinguis hed public ser vice.
He s aid he is proud lo be an
American and proud to be a
Georgian.
C•ll 642-5678.
Put • tew words
to work for ou.
The new bearing Is scheduled
for 9:30 a.m . Oct. 15 at the
Orange Count y Board of
Supervisors chambers in Santa
Ana.
Peter Greenwald, deputy
counsel for the management dis·
lrict, said1 that be sought the re.
bearing because the board may
have ''abused its discretion" by
E '!"fti
EARL'S
"-.__ATWO _ ... _ ........
~· l•t )t ,..~,
bt,w-tite ,.....,. 5,.,,, '' ¥°"" OOOt
tC•ll $1or• ~Me;t Y(Nif At••I
CottA•s.641-1289 ... ...__
--~95-0401 -~c..-r-, .... °'9p*-f et A..-, ....... I
Greenwald said he is "tryingr
to d o two things · reduce
emissions al\d make 1t uncom·
fortable for the company to
operate in Costa Mesa."
Narmco produces fiber-glass·
like aircraft and missile parts at
its Costa Mesa facility.
Company officials said much
of the operation already has
been moved to a new plant in
Anaheim and that the con·
troversial manufacturing por·
lion requiring a special permit
But Greenwald contends the
board also should have required
a reduction of solvent emlsslons.
He said the f irm 'a current
operation emits 63 pounds more
solvent daily than state stand·
ards allow.
DAILY PHDT
CLASSIFIED ADS
&42•5878
ESTABLISHED 1956
17 OFFICES
With a Truly
Professional Approach
Telephone Answering Bureau
NATIONWIDE 800 NUMBERS , PAGING SERVICE your number or ours
WAKE-up service word processing
telex 9 facsimile secretarial service
Please Ask For (714) 547 -7777 Ext. 721T
•
Most stations will offer tours
of the facilities every 15
minutes, as well as s lide and
film shows, rescue demonstra·
lions and information packets.
For more information, call the
nearest county fire station. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---IL--~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~-"---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Payments
to wife
taxable
WASHINGTON <AP )
-Voluntary payments
to s upport a fo rmer
spouse are not alimony
and thus are not tax-
deductible, the U.S. Tax
Court says.
The court held that the
Internal R eve nu e
Service was right in de·
nying Walter J . Dean of
Pitts burgh a deduction
for $1 ,972 in payments
made to his former wife
in 1977.
The decision will cost
Dean $418 in extr a
taxes.
When Dean and Susan
Tomlinson Wheeler
we re divorced in Ohio in
May 1975, their settle-
ment included the state-
m ent, "It is agr eed
ther e will be n o
a limony."
The court wrote: ··As
we understand ...
Tomlinson's position, it
is that , despite the May
1975 agree ment that
there would b e n o
alimony, the Ohio court
could have modified the
decree at any time to
compel him to support
his former wife.
••Believing this to be
true, he agreed in Oc-
tober 1975 to provide her
with support and funds
until she could become
self-sustaining without
waiting for the formal
compulsion o f th e
courts .
·'As a matter of sub-
stantive law, he argues,
he was obligated to S\JP·
port Susan because of
their previous marital
relationship even though
as a matter of form the
Ohio Court had not yet
ordered him to do so."
The Tax Court said it
was not clear that the
divorce agreement was
subject to modification
at all. Regardless, the
court said, "the fact re·
mains that the decree
had not been modified in
1977 when the dis puted
payments were made."
Professor
is fined
SAN DIEGO CAP)
A professor arrested
with 200 reptiles that his
s tudents found on a
Mexican island has been
fined $2,000 for bringing
snakes and lizards to the
1 United States without
proper permits.
The sentence was pro·
' nounced on BenjamiQ
Harrison Banta. 39, a
faculty member of Mira
Cos ta College in
Oceanside. after h e
pleaded uHty. He and an
assistant , Steven
Patrick Sandberg, 27,
were put on two years '
probation.
'
They were a rrested
with the tranquilized
reptiles,April 19 after a
field trip to Isla Angel
De la Guarjia off the
east coast of Baja
California.
Ftrlll fined
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -A Tulare firm
has been fined $25,000
for sbotting San Joaquin
Valley ranc:ben on the
wel1ht ol their Uvestock.
Brem man Meal Co., do-
lnl bualneu u Tulare
Meat Co., wu ordered
lo make rest.ltution.
9
1HREE
FoRW-~
WOKING
NGSTO
COUNT ON
NOW!
Open a one-year, Tax-Free
Savings Account today at Security
Pacific Bank with a minimum
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9-function, ultra thin calculator. Free.
Our new Tax-Free Savings
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You can earn a new higher
rate of interest, tax-free, with a minimum
deposit of $500, and the term is just one
year.* If you're in a 30% or higher tax \
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*ror early withdrawal there is a substantial penalty and I~ of tax-exempt status.
Account can mean substantial
tax savings. But even if you're not
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All deposits are insured by the
FDIC up to $100,000 and bicked
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and get high interest, tax-free
savings, and a free calculator. too.
Only from Security Pacific,
the looking forward bink.
•,
•
)
r--_... ____ --·
.,
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October&, 1981
DRAllGI CDAl1
11ERE
ARE
news._ every day
Local , county, state, national and
international events come to 'iOUr
doorstep in the bright, ._.._
light and lively Daily
Pi lot.
G5) Keep an eye on
~loeal government
No other newspaper brings you
more news of your city council,
planning commission,
sc hool and college
districts and county
government.
~ Laugh, ery or get ~smart
Advice from Ann Landers, humor
from Erma Bambeck, interesting
features on people, opinions,
~lllllllllili.. informative columns and I
comics brighten _,, I I
your world. ~ ~
YOUR HDlllUWll DlllY PAPIR
. To keep up with ~ . ., ~ all that's·· happen•0 e
in your eomniunity
you need the
Daily Pilot
••• every day
REASONS 'Yl1Y •••
/lll.follow your t._.am
"17/ The sports action at 15
Orange Coast high schools, three
c ommunity colleges, UC Irvine
and Cal State campuses is
regularly reported by the
Daily Pi lot sports staff.
Keep up with nation-
a 11 y ranked college
and pro teams, too!
--~
B Save money and dJ shopping time
Real values on items from apple-
sa uce to zippers are advertised
every day in the Daily Pilot .
Becaustj the ads are from
firms in this area,
you save time, ef-
fort and money.
~Enjoy your Sunday
~Family Week ly, color comics,
finance, the latest new s and
features about your community,
your money and you highlight
the interesting r eading ~~
packaged in your ~~
Sunday Daily Pilot.
FAM f(....'( Enough to r ead -wCckL
and enjoy.
fii]·Tune in to the·
{/ latest TV logs.
The late s t , most accurate
television guide is published
each weekday in the Daily Pilot.
On Fridays, Pi lot TV Log
charts the tube
in convenient,
easy-to-find
grids.
Get into the Daily Pilot D ·1 p·1 4'.
for only '4.00 per month. II J 111
------------~~-~-~~~~~~-~--~~~~~-~~-~~----------, 642-4321
1 delivered Daily Pilot every day. ':.~:~;.·;.c I
'. •
: I'd like to enjoy the comforts of a home .....
111111
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~-----.... Enclosed is $.4.00 for one month. u1o11~';,'.,H ______ ,,,,, 11
: B~~!.~!::~ .. ~~.~~~~. ~~!:L : • I
I . Na me ....................... , . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DC>''A('·• Nllt If• .,., ,., •r-.iA• .... ._.. I
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I Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orange Coast Daily Pilot I
I BO>C 1560 I
I City .................... · · · · · · · · · · Phone ··········..... Costa Mesa, CA . 92626 I
I I
I I I Signature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CIRCULATION DEPT. I
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I .,.,01"ouw1District ................... Rate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I ·------------~---------------------------------------------~ Complete the coupon ... glue or tape the prepaid label on an envelope for malling, or call 642-4321 . Ask for Clrculatlon.
! I ;
' .
':
·1
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i J
·1
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I
I
I
... _ .... -
Radi o explore s Mi d d le Age • TllllSI C
NEW YORK <AP> -M u slc la con 1t10Uy
cbaoalna, but a new
radio aeries hl1hJ11htln1 ,
the sounds of the Middle
Aaes and Rena1saance
contenda lbat lt baa not
nece\sarily improved.
"You have to 1ive up
the ldea of procress in
music," saya Nicholas
Ke nyon, host for the
13 -part se ri es,
"Cathedral, Court and
Countryside."
"You have to give up
the Idea that music got
bigger, better and more
sophisticated. That is a
19th-century idea. In the
20th century, that idea
has coUapsed. We have
com e to realize that
each age of music has
its own Insights."
• UA llOYIEI
Bfu 990 4022
EDWAllOI NEWPOlllT
Ncwpoo Beactl 644 0760
utWAllDI MV•TINOTON TWIN
Hunt111Q1on Beach 848 0388
IDWAllDI VIEJO TWIN
Mission Viejo 830 6990
IDWAllDI CllllfMA WEST
Westminster 891 3935
ClllDOME
Orange 634 2553
•M.•Ct
Hf.WAY Jt INllYl·t• Wes~Slet 891 3693
:e :• • •• •• • • •
Turn your
unusables
into
usable
cash. Call
Dai ly Pilot
classified
642-5678.
The aeries premieres
Mo nday on most Na·
tlonal Public Radio sta·
lions. Air date and time
may vary, so check
local llsllngs
''T he second thing is
that you must not expect
early music to grab at
your heart strings and
move you emotionally
like the great 19th·
century music does,"
says Kenyon , music
critic tor T h e New
Yorker magazine. "In
early music, the heart
generally was not worn
on the sleeve, but it was
there."
Lis teners familiar
with Richard Wagner's
op era, "Tris tan and
Isolde," will grasp that
point in the opening seg.
ment, which includes
the le&end of ''Tristan
and laeult" act to music
or lhe 13th lo the lSth
centuries and performed
by the New Orlt'ans
Muslca dn Cameru
"A rondeau by
Machaut, a mass b) J os·
quin, a motet Gabriell
can all be as moving 1n
their different ways as
the · Eroica · or 'Tristan·
can," Kenyon says, "but
there's a fundamenta l
coolness that makes the
passion expressed quite
e xtraordinarily tense
a nd penetrating "
As the title s uggests.
s ubsequent program!>
will explore the sacred.
profa ne and ceremonial
mus ic of the Middle
Ages through the early
NightSP.Ot
guide!
.EVENl~S
ConrlngThursday
October 8 th
Mlle for mile. the Orange Coast has to
rank as one of the nights pot capitals of
the world, with over 000 eating & drinktng
establishments. Find out what the hf't
spots are Thursday, Oct. 8, in a s pecial
pull-out section exclusively 1n the Dall~ Pilot
Daily Pilai
For home deli\le ry, call 612· l:J:~l
STARRING
buro~ul'
·1·:.111 ) rn11s11 l1kt•
n1•w lllllSH tr·nils lo 11
tr .1C'I not \11\11 or d111 11 \
<.·0111·1•11 uutl11·11l'" 11 hi
tr Jc ti. llll' suit 111 ,,.., """
\\ hu I:-I Jllll'I plll 11fJ 11} •
lh\• forni.1111\ uf l'Olh• n
halls.· Ill' lo.fl\
c
TH~ ~All:HCH Ul:UT'l'.NANT-
WOMAH IRI A
1 00 9 JC
MOMMll: DUA£ST (PC) \110W'i
AT 1 (HJ 'I jO r
IC: ~L~W-==
LAUGH (f•I Al I 00 'I JO
c=:=.--
COfOITINE:NT Al
D IVIDE P( A
I~ ' J•l
=·----
ONLY WHEN I
LI'UGH '" "" Sf'rm l ~.., T TH') I"(': I
.J
THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY
·oF NEWPORT B EACH
Teleprompter presents programming that gets yot1
righ t where you live!
MONDAY October 5th·8:00PM -Onr hour-.C'a~on pn•rntl'n 111 · '\1'\\Ji111 1 '\1111
TUESDAY October 6th·7:00 PM -"This Is Newport Bea<'h ..
7:30 PM -"751 h J\nnlvrrsar\' , ... dra<k ( 'rn ,., cll,!I
. -
WEDNESDAY October 7th· 7:00 PM -Recablecas1 ot "NC"\vpon :\1111
THURSDAY October Sth-7:00 PM -"21<,l AnnuaJ Charac ter Bn.11 l'a1,u l1
Jl'RIDAY October 9th-7:00 PM -Recablecast of "Newport Now ·
ON.CABLE CHANNEL 24 or K
NEWP O RT BE AC H
PROGRAMMING DEPT. (714) 642-5797
I '
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981 C7
·.1he1feRCh
zeulenanc.~ --woman .
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NOW PLAYING
Ml'\SIUll Yll JO
'
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The fi1st comeid~ that does laughtet juatl~e.
A Potomounl Picture'~
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t~CAI"[ rnoM ,.EW YORK' c•1' "THE CANNONBALL RUN" -~v• """'
· 11 .w 1Ul '"' "NINE TO AVE" -
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IUINA11!AIK ORIVE·IN .,..___.__ J .... 1 anoo
a ,,...,,. .. f\HltJittfit'l ..oeooy·1 MW
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MOMt,oC DEAREST tool ONLY WHEN I LAUGH' IWl
""'''' "'""' l lfll r; DARLINGS Clll "SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES" .-1
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Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5 , 1981
'"''ll\'
-EVB9il0-, t.'001· NIW8 CMANJl'8 ANGEi.i 9 Nfl\. llOOTMU.
Atlanta Fak!Ont at Plllla
delphla Eaglet Q
•~HUNT
r.t•A•s •H
OOMOYW * *" "It'• '°'Y Tum" ( tHOI Jiii Cleyburoh.
MlchMI Douglu A tw"ll
~' OhbOO matll ~~
10t rMIUIM the protllerna
In Mf IN9-ln r•tlOnlhlC>
lllhen Iha find• a ,_ love
wtllle Ill New Y orli. tor het
llther'e r9Mafria0t 'R'
(j} wt4A T'I Uft AMINCW
T Ille • llhor1 looll at adultl
who believe twinging la the
only way to in.. an Am.ttl-
can bullllghter. gorlll1·
gram•. It rip gr ams and
IOtt MOf• CtMOYll
• * * "The Jerk" (1979)
Steve M11t1n. eemadelte
Pttff a A ohronlc ecrew-up
makes mllllont on a .,..ird
Invention only to ION II Ill
In consumer damage suits
'R'
9:30 Ill AETUAN TO SPACE
Astronaut Ruaty 8<;hwelck -
arl hosll a 1Urvey of Amef·
k:1'1 return to ma.nned
speceflight 1tter a 6-year
peuee COi Potter plan• IO lhOw
hit all·tlme laYOrlte WNI•
em u a plck-me--up tor the
company'• badly UQOing
11\0fale.
I HAWAII Fl\/E-0
• IUCTNC
°"""'"""(IQ
TRAGEDY S~aron Gless play!» the
mother of a brain-injured teen-ager who
became an honored athlete in "'The
Miracle of Kathy Miller·· tonjghl at 9 on
Channel 2.
(t)) ENTERT AINMEHT
TOHIOHT
to) HAMMER HOUSE OF
HOAAOA
""The Sllent Scream Pet.,
Culhlng wrtr•rs • blurre
pet shop owner with
Mac:hlavelllen arnblttons (I) c:et NEWS
Nec:NEWS
MOW .... * "The Whit• Lions.
(11181) M IChHI York.
Glynnis O'Conn<>< An ani-
mal behavior epeciaJ1a1'1
lemlly IOffl• him In lhe jun-
gle to help fight eg1ln11
~hers thraatMlng valu-
able albino lion cubl 'PG'
0 MOVIE • * "from Heu To Victo-
ry" ( 19791 George Hamfl·
ton, George Peppard Four
friend• from dflllf8nt
countrlel mull teave Paris
In 1939 to fight tor their
tndMduat countrlH tn
World Wtr ff 'PG'
e:ao I 9UU.8EY! WELCOME IACt<,
~O'TnR
• KCET N€W88EAT ml 8T\JCtO SEE
"Gymnattlcs" Young gym-
nastt train for tuture Olym-
pic compelllion. lwo kids
from Neb<uk• make e ec1-
enoe-llc:1ton lllm (RI
(1)8NEW8
Cl) 'T ' SHOAT SU8JECT
8:46 aNEMA8COAE
8:65 8 EOrTOAIAL
7:00 B C88 NEWS
N8CNEW8 0 HAP9'Y DAYS AGAIN
In need ol eJttra caSh. the
Cunmngham1 reluctantly
rMt out the room over ttwi
Q!t&ge to Fonzie
U YOU ASKED FOR IT CD THE MUPPETS
Guest· Joel Grey.
Cl) JOt<ER'S WILD
S) OVEREASY
"Keeping Flt" Guests
Anne Jellrey1. Robert
Stl!f'flng Q ml MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
~THE MUPPETS
Guest Lota Falana
CC'MOVIE ***'"' 'The Pllsone< Ot
Second Avenue ( t976)
Jaoc:k Lemmon Anne Ban-
croft 8aMCI on ttwi pity by
Nell Simon An advertising
execuu.,. loses his Job end
his sanHy because ol the
r~IOn lfl<I ,,.. hecllC
Manhltten pKe 'PG'
COJMOVIE
• • • "Mcllntockt· ( 1963)
John Wayne, Maureen
O"Har1 A cetlle baron
tries to handle 1 group ol
disgruntled lnol1n1 Ind
cope w!lh • llery. deter-
mlneO wlle II lhe aame
ume.'G"
l $) LAFF·A-THOH
A comedian ho11 and lour
comic conteat1nt1 who
compete against one
another are leatureo In this
uncensored comedy game
show
(?}MOVIE • * * 'h '"WOOOllOCk'
( 1970) DocwMntery Meny
ol the lop muSlcat groupe
of the lete "60s perform 11
the famous rock concon
held frt Bethel. New York,
In t9e9 ·o·
7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN
FHlured' a lfioll et e netu
ral protlert called cottagen
that helps remove skon
v.r1nkles. a.n ln1erv1ew with
lh8 singing group the
"Knack". a woman who
composes music for anl-
melt, • man who has diet
and e•etdse plans for ,
elmott any pet 0 (B FAMILY FEUD 0 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
The girts beeome volunt-
nursea,
0 MATCHGAME CD M·A·s·H
When Frank threatMs to
leave Hawkeye ano
Trapper find 11 means Oou·
ble Outy tor them and
1nven1 1 way to make him
stay
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
fE) MACNEJt. I LEHRER
REPORT Et!) OREAT
PERFORMANCES
Ormenoy Conoucts Pic-
tures Al An Exhtb1tion"
Maestro Eugene Ormandy
c~ucts the Pflt1aoetph1a
Orchestra on works by
woll-Fertart. Rlcharo
Strauss and Mussorgsky
Cl) P.M. MAClAZINE
A family of surv1vaUst1 who
have prepared for soci-
ety's cotlapse. a woman
who has colleCted over
1400 Barbie Ooffs.
[$)THE WACKY WORLD
OF JONATHAN WINTERS
Host Orton Welles Guest·
Jackte Cooper
8:00 II Cl) OREA T MOVIE
STUNTS: RAIDERS OF
THE LOST ARK
The leehn1ques beh1no the
special ellec11 of this film
a.s well as other mov'8S are
seen when Hatnson Ford
lootcs •t stunts •nd stunt
men of the Clnem•
0 QJ UTTlE HOUSE OH
THEPAAIRIE
fSeuon Premiere) The
Oleson• talle In a gtrl trom
the orphenaoe to taJ.e the
piece of Nellie who has
moved to N-YO<k (Pa11
110 0 MOVIE
* * •;, "Beck To The Plan-
et 01 The Apes" ( 1974)
Roady McOowaff. Ron
Harper Two astronauts
crHh land their spaGecrah
and dl1eover a c1vlh~a11on
of 1nte1t1Qent simians
0 MOVIE
* * • * "Hud" ( 1963) Paul
Newman. Melvyn Douglas
A young boy is torn
bet-love 10< his lree-
liv1ng uncle and hos grano-
tathef
CD p ..... MAGAZINE
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 ICN>CT ICBSI 0 1 On-TV
D l<NBC tN8Cl r Z·TV
8 l<TLA (Ina I .. HBO
• l<ABC (ABC) c fC1Mmaicl
D l(FMB ICBSI (J (WORI NY , N.Y
I) l(HJ-TV (Incl I dn I WTBSI
G KCST !A8CI £ IESPNI
• KTTV (Ind.) $ fShowtl~J
e KCOP-TV Ond I u SPC>lllght
• KCET (PBS> <t I Cclble News Network>
D KOCE I PBSI
Cl) MOVIE * * * "Jenny (1970)
Marlo Thomas. Alan Aid•
A pregnant glrl and a
dr1l1-d00ger form • m••-
r11ge ot convMience
fl1' GREAT
PERFORMANCES
"Ormandy Conducts Pl<l·
lures At An Exhlbmon·
Maestro Eugene Or,,;andy
conOuct1 lhe Phllldelphla
Orohestr• In works by
Wolf-Ferrari. Richard
Strauss and Mussorgsky 0:tJ REMEMBER WHEH:
OOTEAM.OOI
Host I n1rretor Dick
Ceveu cheefa Amenca ·1
love of sports with • cloae
IOOk at the superaters a.no
great tea.ms. grano goofs.
big brawls and the unique
dedatton of Ian• and
pleye<s SJ GALLAGHER: MAD AS
HELL
The unpredtetable Gal-
lagher return• with new
and 1ngen1ous oev1ces,
outrageous Sight gags ano
to speak oul against • host
of tredltlOns 11ends end
currMt events 0 tNTERHATIOHAL ALL·
STAR FESTIVAL
Laa M1nneff1. Wayne New-
ton. Ben Veteen, Lola
Falena, the Muppet Mon-
sters. and the Harlem Glo-
betrotters star 1'1 this sono
and dance comedy hour
from Germany
8:30 Q) AU IN THE FA.MIL Y
Edith is arresteo tor ShO-
plitt1ng m NON-FICTION
TEl.EVISIOH
"Pestte10es And Pilla Fo1
Export Only · The 1nd11-
crlm1nate marketing of
dangerous pes1tc1des In
ThlrO Worto countroes is
exam1neo (Part 1)
9:00 II (I) MOVIE
"The Miracle Of Kathy Mii·
ler· (Prem1er11 Sharon
Gtess Frank ConV9tse
The true story of an Afl-
zone ,_,.ager·1 etfor1a to
return lo • normal hie alter
a near lllal eccldent 11
chronocieo
O Q!MOVIE
SIOney ShOtr" (Premiere)
Tony Randall Lorna
Patterson A lonely, m1d-
dle-ageo New Yorker
shares e non-romenll() bul
loving rel1t1onshlp With a
young woman hall his age
and her daughter D THAr S tNCREDIBLE
Featured a car that wu
driven non-11op 7,500
miles; triplet brothert
reunited alter 19 year1. •
two-headed Chinese mi1n.
a bar-tending chimp CD MERVGRI~
Guests. lacy J Dalton,
Elholl GoulO, Met1saa Gil-
bert. Herry AnOer1on.
Randy Hamilton m HOH-ACTION
TELEVISION
'PestlCldes Ano P11t1 For
EJ<port Only" The lndf1-
crim1n1te merkellrtg of
dengerous pestiddes In
Thtrd World countries 11
exam1ne0 (Pert 11
@) DOH CORYELL
Cl MOVIE *•'I) "A Small Ctrcle 01
Fr1en0s ( 19801 Brad Dev-
is. Karen Allen In the
19605. the lrlenOSlllp and
Idealism of three Herverd
studen11 11 thrutan•d
when one of them 11 drelt-
ed 10 serve In Vietnam R
10«1 0 0 Cl) NEWS
D MOVIE
* * 'h ""The Chairman'"
l 1969) Gregory Peck.
Arthur Hiit when he 11 sent
to Red Chtna to obtain a
secret lormuta, a remote-
conlrot device Is planted
belllnd a spy's Hr
EE) RETURN TO SPA<:£
Astronaut Rusty Schwek:k-
ar1 ho1t1 a survey of Amer-
ica's return to manned
spacelllghl alter a 6-year
pause.
@) THE ROCKFORD
FILES
Rockford ts the innocent
terget of a vengeful e•-
con111ct [ S1 DAVID SHEEHAN'S
SHOWTIMEIN
HOLLYWOOD
DavlO Sheehan takes vs on
lhe SGenH and behind lhe
scenes of HOiiywood to see
whet goes on
1<>:06 ( Z) MOVIE • * * Kl" Me Ka1e··
( t953) Kathryn Grayson.
Howero Keel Two stars.
once mamed. become
partner~ professionally
and ltno that they ergue as
much on stage as they Oo
ott 'G"
10:30tD NEWS
II) INOEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
ml THEWARATHOME
A small Midwestern !own -
-Madison. Wisconsin --ts
translormed Into a battle-
ground whM American
foreign policy 1n Vietnam
and American values at
hOme are cnetlenged
'H I HBO SNEAK
PREVIEW: OCT08ER
Husband·anO-wlfe comics
Jerry Stiller and Anne
Meara lntroouce the mov-
ies, specials ano sports
evMll coming to Home
Box OlllQe In October
0 MOVIE
* • • '>t Rio Bravo·
( 1959) John Weyne. Dean
Martin An Old cripple. a
former Oeputy-lurneo-
Orunk. a young quickOraw
gunthrtQOt ano • girt help a
shenlt to outsmart a pow-
erful renche< who wants to
get hos klller brother
releated from prison "G"
@MOVIE
• • '>t ··The Outsider"
f 1978) Sterling Hay08'I.
Craig Wasson A young
Idealist travels to Northern
Ireland to join the struggle
for 1n<1ependence. 'R'
11:00 II 0 (I) ®l ~NEWS 0 SATURDAY NIOKT 0 MEWL YWED OAME
Q) THE JEFFEA80NS
«!) BEHNYHILL
Benny satirizes a him com-
pany called "Cheapo
Fiims ··
EE) DICK CAVETT
Guest composer Ned
Rorem (P•r1 t ot 2)fA)
!C)MOVIE • * "When A Sir anger
Callt" ( 1979) c.tol Kene.
Charles Durning While
bebysitt•ng. a young girl Is
terrorized by phone calls
lrom a psycnotoc killer R"
H1MOVIE * * ,.., "Where The 8uffak>
Roam" ( 1980) Bttt Murray.
Peter Boyle Journallsl
Hunter S Thompson uses
his unorthO<lox reporllng
techniques to cover some
of !he mejor polltleal and
soctal even1s ol the late
'60t ano early '70s 'R"
'Sidney' tries family life
By FRED ROTHENBERG ,.,. T._..._ W'1W
NEW YORK -''Sidney Shorr" comes out of
the closet tonight al 9 on Channel 4 in a dramatic
comedy that is not about the main character 's
homosexuality but rather the human condition of
loneliness and the extreme measures taken to
avoid it.
It's a warm .. engaging movie t hat underscores
the universal need for family. Sure, a homosexual
"adopting'' the wife and chiJd he couldn't have is
not the Ozzie-and·Harriet convenUonality piously
demanded on TV by the Moral Majority.
But it should to uch chords in any body
watching, which is what the Rev. Donald Wildmon
of the Coalition for Better Television never did
before be gave "Sidney Shorr" an NG (no good )
rating last spring.
Wildmon's hanging without trial is unfair.
NBC, on the other hand, deserves applause for
tonight's movie pilot but not for its decision to
neuter Sidney in the weekly series "Love, Sidney,"
beginning Oct. 28.
NBC had a chance to elevate another season of
standard-fare TV by treating homosexuality as a
part of humanity; instead il buckled under a n as-
sault by a sell-appointed standard-bearer and dis·
avowed Sidney's sexual persuasion.
In tonight's movie, Sidney la middle-aged go-
ing on senior cltlien. mourning the death of bis
lover. He shuffles lhrou1h the streets of New York,
a city wboee busWnc crowds and acUvtty can
torture the lonely. Sldney eat.a dell sandwiches otf
paper·b•I pl1cemats in a barren, el1ht-room apartmenl.
He Met UUle reuon for Uvin1 uoW another of
New York'• m111e:ar a fiakJ, 1tna1flln1acltffl1lll
behind Wm at 1 Greta Garbo movie. They're tbe
only people there. "That really 1ot to you," 11)'1
' '
La urie Morgan (Lorna Patterson), striking up con-
versation.
They resume their discussion at his place. but
instead of slipping into something more comforta-
ble. they slip into a comfortable li festyle together .
Sidney is tr ansformed. Having someone to
care about, he becomes Felix Unge r, the
fussbudget Crom the "Odd Couple." Their first
morning together, Sidney creates a spread of lox
and bagels for the transplant from Wyoming.
·'These donuts are stale.·· she said.
"Where are you from , the moon?"
The references to his homosexuality are subtle
-a picture of the late Martin on the mantel·
Sidney allaying Laurie's concerns about separate
bed rooms staying separ ate. "You don't have to
worry about me."
They become a nother "Odd Couple," fulfilling
needs and interfering In each other 's lives. Their
platonic love is captured beautlruJly by the photo-
graphic technique of stUI frames, like snapshots
Crom an album.
The major conflict Inevitably is Laurie's de·
sire to have normal male relationships and bis
Jealousy, overprotecttveneas and ratherina. His
reading list for her Includes "The Scarlet Letter," I
"Celibacy Alternative" and "Looking for Mr.
Goodbar," but she sets pregnant by a married!
man anyway.
Randal~ ls fine and Mias Patterson wonderful·
ly inrectioua and se11-asaured. She's now the star or
CBS' "Private 8eQJamln" and will be replaced by
Swooate Kurti In "Love, Sidney.''
•'Sidney Shorr'' is a clever endeartn1 movie,
but will the quality be mal.nta!M'd 1n the series?
The pttllmlnaey answer wu the one NBC 1ave to
Wildman.
i TUBE TOPPERS
KOCE ~ 7 30 and KCET @ 8:00
"Great Performances " Eugene Orman
dy conducts the Philadelphia Orchestr a
CBS tJ 8 :00 'Great Movit! Stunts
Raiders of the Lost Ark " llarrnson ft'ord
looks at t he tec hniques behind tht>
s tunts.
KHJ 0 8:00 "llud ." Paul Nt.>wmun
stars in award-winning movie
NBC CD 9:00 'Sidney Shorr .. A movie
premiere of the controversi<il program
about a sin"' le father I See s tory below 1
IS)MOVIE Ltll MOVIE
..
* * "194 t" P9791 John
8411ullll. T~lrO Mllune
Attet the bombtng ol PHrl
Harbor, Southern Caht0<-
nte e111111an1 end millter;
personnel r..ct with unbri-
dled panic to ,_. 01 I
Jep.,_ llttck In their
own bllCkyard "PO
* * 'h "8rubaket'' ( 1980)
Robet1 Reatoro. Vaphel
1(0110 A reform-minded
werOM uncovers wide-
spread corruptton when he
en1er1 hos .-iy au1gne0
e>rlaon po1lng ea an
Inmate 'R'
11:30 • (I) QUINCY
Two -gency pa11en1t
die Whlle being trenaferreo
from 1 prlvete hOepitll to a
county holpllll tor people
wtlh no money 0 (B THE BEST OF
CARSON
1:008 MOVIE
* o,., "Sierra sue· I 1941)
G-Autry. Smiley Bur-
nette
-~ NETWORK HEWS
• • "Shook Wev••"
( 1tn1 Peter C111n1no.
llfOOk.e Adlt'llt A OIOUO ol
'°"'lat• atrtn<Md on •
lmtll 1114111\d lllCOUl'I., I
lotmet SS otftoet lllCI hi•
Collec!tlOn of Hpet\l'Mfl(al
mutltltl 'R
1;06 MCMI
***'A '"Wooo1toe1i •
( 1970) Oowmentwy Many
ot the top mulical groupe
or the late ·eoa pert0tm ••
the flmOltl roell concert
held In Bethel New York.
tn 1969 ·o·
1:30 l S) THI t8LAHO °"'
HIVAWUZ
A c1e,,.,1y anlmateCI come-
dy about the gretdy rr1-
phorn. • bizarre character.
cra1hlanded on the 1111nd
of ,,._veW\lz, who trlel to
mooern1.ze 11 for his own
personal geln
•:OO (C l MOVIE
• • "Lepke ( 1975) Tony
Cu1111. An1ane11e Comer
louts "Lepke" BUCl\altet,
• le•d•r of America's
undefworld, head• up the
notorious org1rtlz111on
known a• Murder. inc ·R 0 AH EV£NtN0 OF
MAOIC AHO COMEDY
Orson Bean hosta tnts
IUtatlOul houl Of Hal LHI
ano 11~111er t•ped at Tiie
GrNI Amerteen MullC Hall
In San FranctlCO
4:30 (~THE ME N0800Y
KNOWS
This Bro1oway musteel
po•lrayi the pain the plea-
1ure ano the sorrow ol
Ghetto ttle as 1t 11 seen
through r.hHdren·s eyes
Guest1 Bob Hope. Raquel
Welch, Carol Nebl•ll (RI
0 NEWS
~= • • • • "'The Emigrants '
( 1972) M8Jl von Sydow. Llv
Ullmann A Swedistl
peHant remffy endure the 1 hardships of lronuer Ille
when they come to Amer1-
ca 1n the 19th century "PG'
(!))MOVIE
I Taw11day•11
~aylb11 .. Mot~l.-s
--~NING-0 FACE THE MUSIC
Q) THE 000 COUPLE
Felix votvnteers on betl•fl
of Oscar ano hlmsell to
take care ot a smell bOy
II) OHE STEP 8EYOHD
"Call From Tomorrow" An
former ectreu. desponO·
ent ove< the death of her
chttd, lfln to m•k• a
come beck
fl1) KCET NEW88EAT
®l A8CNEW8
NtOKTUNE
~MDIGHT -
12.-oo U MOVIE
• • ·ceu Ot The Canyon··
I 1942) a-Autry A cow,
boy comes upon a g•ng ol
cattle rustlers h101ng out In
' a canyon
D A8CNEWS
NIOKTUHE 0 MOVIE • * "The Cracksman"'
• ( 1965) George Sanders.
cnar1es Drake An experl
satecrecker finds hlmsetl
In heavy demeno
Q) MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE
«!)ROOKIES
fl1) INTROOUCTION TO
PtitLOSOPHY
@) THE ROCKFORD
ALES
Wh•le on a lillh1ng trip.
Aoclltord geta lldetracked
Into local po1111es and mur-
der
Z)MOVlE
• • • 'Cheech And
Chong"• Next Movie
( 1980) Ateh8'0 "Cheect>
Ma11n. ThomH Chong
Two potheed1 heva
nurne1oua small adven-
tures white roamtng the
streets ot Loa Angelel 1n
searcn ot the ''perfect
high .. "R"
12-.30 a a TOMORROW
Guests Maynaro Fergu-
son. eulho< Kitty Kelley D MOVIE • * • "'Holtman • P97 ti
Peter Sellers Slneao
Cusack
weekend with h1m In hll
~artment w rrs EVERYBOOY'S
BUSINESS
"Environments 01 Busi-
ness'"
12:40 tJ (I) HARRY 0
A woman tltres Herry to
find her m1sstng brother
(RI
• • 'h "Wholly Moses!"
( 1980) Dudley Moore,
L1re1ne Newman In bibh-
cal Egypt, a false prophet
named Hersehe4 eaves-
drop1 on a dl'llne convet-
tahon wtlh Moaes ano
Oecldes he must be the
one to le.a his people out
of slevery 'PG" (SJ THE A TLAHT A 810
l.AFFOFF
Five of their finest young
comtes let toose W11h thetr
tunnieSI l111e 1n lh•s come-
oy ahow<lown
@ MOVIE
• • o,., • II s My rurn •
( 1980) Jolt Clayburgh.
Mlehael Douglas A brll-
hant Chk:ago math profes-
sor realizes the problems
In her live-In relallonanlp
whM She l1nd1 a new love
whlle In New Yotk for ner
lather"• remarriage 'R'
1:30 Cl) MOVIE
**'"'"Paris Blues" ( 1961)
Sidney Poitier, Paul New·
rnan A pair of Americans
•n Pan& romance two gtrls
on vacation
1:3HZ)MOVIE • *'" "Staroust Memo-
rtea·· (1980) Woody Allen.
CharlOtte Aampling A suc-
cessful d1tector races a
personal cr1111s as ,,., tries
to melle some m•,or decj..
6lorls In his hie 'PG
1:50 8 NEWS
2:00 0 IEHTEATAINMENT
TOHIOHT
(SHEWS
$)MOVIE • * * ""The Great Texas
Dynamite Chase ( t9761
Claudia Jennings. Jocelyn
Jones Two temale ban~
robbers outwit police as
they ravage the male
populace with blazing
shootouts. dynamite blasts
1nd outrageous disguises
'R"
2:20 II EDITORIAL
2:25 II MOVIE
* * "The Piii Caper'"
I 19681 Steven Strompell,
Otck Gautier A potent
chemical transforms a
m1IO-mannered weakhng
Into 1 superhero 2:30 00 NEWS
@ MOVIE
5:30 0 * * • •;, "Between The
Lines" ( 1977) Lindsay
Crouse, Jell GolOblum
The stall membets of an
unOerground' Boston
newspaper have •er IOus
romantic ano 1ournal1st1C
encountets with each other
ano the SUbJ8C1s ot lhetr
stories 'R"
8:00 [¢ • * ""High Rise Don-
key" Three mischievous
children attempt 10 h10e •
Oonkey 1n their h1gh-rtse
apartment G
($) * • '> Every Whocn
way But Loose 11978>
Ctont Eestwooa, Sonora
Locke A two-fisted truck-
" ano hos orangutan com-
panion take off 1n pursull
of a pretty country-western
s.nger "PG
e,10 (Z° * * ·~ "'Sterdust Mem-
or1es00 t 1980) Woody Allen.
Chartolte Ramphng A suc-
cesslul director laces e
personal cri11S as no tries
to make some maior Oec•-
stons 1n h•s fife 'PG
7:00 CC)•*'" "'Arabian Adven·
ture" ( 19791 Chr1s1opher
lee, Miio 0 Shea An evll
sorcerer hotos a beautiful
princess captive white 8
young pnnc;e gets assist·
ance from genttt en9 fly·
1ng carpet\ tn a brave
attempt to rttKue het "G
7:30 0 • * '"The Amazing
AOventures Of Joe 90 G
8:00 'S1 • • • The Tande<
Trap" ( 19551 Debbie Rey-
nolds Frank Sinatra A
soph1s11ceted bachelor
down on marriage ,._ts e
girt wt>o treps him 'G
9:00(C •'h00Runn1ng '(19791
Mtehaet Douglas. Susan
Anspach H••tng falleO at
nearly everythtng 1r1 hos hie,
a 34-year-Old 01vorced
man Oec10es to try out as a
marathoner for the U S
Olympic Team PG'
0 * • 'h "Shoat The Sun
Down" f 1980) Christopher
WalkM, Margot Kidder In
t836, tour disparate mis-
fits use an olO map 10
search for burleO gold
'PG"
10:00 «!) * Ir "No Holds
Barred"' t t9521 Bnwery
Boys. Mar )Orte Reynotoa
One of the Boys dlscovets
he has an amazi"9 apti-
tude tor boxing
ISl • • ,,., 00Seems Like Otd
TlmH " I IH OI Ooldle
...-. OieYy Cllue A
eoh·llMtled lew)'W le torn
~-~-· huabend· turned-bt nk
roOMr end '* .. ,
l)teatnl lluabenO who ..
111nrtlng tor Callfornte
attorney general. 'PO'
11!00 D e * • "My '•"Ollte
Brunellt" ( 1f47) Bob
HO.,.. Dorothy l.,_ • * ~ "King Of T'he
Pecoe·· ( 1t38J John
W•vn-. Murtel Ev-.
tC> • • • • "'"'°"'" tn The "81n" f 1052) Oe<l4I
Kelty, DeOble Reynolda.
During Hotlywood"I lfanl l-
hon 10 lhe talklea, a top
Iii.Rt lier tells 1n love wltn
a ap1111ed --·e· -AFTERNOON ~
12:00 m •• * "The Mountain
Road" ( 19601 J""" Stew-
9'1. Glenn Corbett
g) * * 'h "The Deughter
01 RoM O"Gredy" ( 1960)
Jurte Hever. Goroon
MKRM
Cl*** "Manin The
Iron Muk" (1939) Loul•
Heywetd. Joan Bennett
8ueO on e novel by Alex-
1 rtder Duma• The
tnlamoua Compte de
Aoc~on p1-. LOUIS
Xtl/'a twin brother on the
French throne and lmpri-
sona the real king tn Ille
e..1111e 'G" t Z) •lot "The LUI Deya Of
Men On Eattn" ( 1973) Jon
Finch. Patrick Meoae
When the ultimate dlustar
llrikes, a Mieptlcat Not>el
1e1entls1 think• that a com-
put., burled undergrouno
c;an aeve the world. ·o·
t:OO fC) • • "Spukle" (1976)
Irene Cara. Lonette
McKee During the 1gsos.
three bleck s111w1 lrorn
the ghetto beoome mualcal
&upef"lters. but -ntually
suttu from the presaurH
of at1rdom 'PG'
($i * * * "The Teno..
Trap" ( t955) Debbie Rey-
rtOldl, Frank Sinatra A
1oph1St1cated bachelor
oown on manlage ,,_ts a
girt whO traps htm G"
1;30 Z * • * ""The Touch"
I t97 t) ElllOtt Gouta. B11><
Anoerson o+rected by 1ng-
ma.r Bergman A h11Ppily
mettled woman ~
1nv0111ed 1n en ettair With a.n
unbalanced archaeol<>glsl
PG
1.00 0 • • * The Hound Of
The BaSl<ervlffet" ( 19711)
Peter Cook Dudley
Moore Master sleuth
Sherloc~ HOimes onvesli-
gates myatet•ous gotngs-
on 11 Baskarv1tle Hall and
begins to suspect every-
one. 1nclud1ng himself
'PG'
8:00 IC * • * 'Oltvet Twist"
( 1975) Animated Based on
lhe story by Cherles Dick-
ens Ohver ano h•S crteket
friend Squeaker outrun
Mr Bumble. Fagin. The
Arllul Dodger and 81/lf Bill
Sykes "G
3:30 fJ • * 'h "Who's Minding
The M1nri·· ( 1967) Jim Hut-
ton Dorothy Provine
0 * * The Amaz.ng
Adventures Of Joe 90" "G
Z • * * "Cheech And
Chong s Neat Movie·
I 1980) R!Cllard °Cheech00
Meron. Thomes Chong
Two potheeds have
numerou~ small advM-
tures wl'lole roaming the
streets ol Los Angele$ In
988rch of the "perlect
high R
4:30, C • * • • The SPtrll 01
St LOUIS ( 1957) James
Stewert. Murray Hem11ton
In 1927 Charles A Lind-
bergh becomes the first
man to lly nonstop across
the Allanttc Ocean to Par-
is 'G'
5:25 ' Z, • • • * Jvllus Cae-
sar ( 1953) Marton Bran-
do. James llAason Baseo
on the pley by Wiiham
Stlakespeare Pot1t1ca1
1ntr1gue and treachery CUI·
m1nate 1n murder In
ancient Rome G
JOHN DARLING
010 ~ HE~ THE. LA"TE6T 5CUiiLEeUTT~ IHEY'~E
SAYING CHAN NEL ONE 15
by Armstrong & Batiuk
GOIN& 10 BE 50LO !
'TOLJ'~e K IDDING/
Wl1Y V-.OULO IHf.Y
WANI 10 SELL
IHE ST,Ai'TION ~
WH O'O IT!
''POWEllFDL'~
-0.vld AnMn, News~
Pilot LogilOOli -a.;IJ Pl.Ii I Candid com....,.,. ..
uclUl'lotfr W. the
MONDAY, OCT. S, 1981
- --~--~· -•-. -----·~-~
Looking for a van for work and
pleasure? Be sure to check today's
listings -classification 9570 .
CLASSIFIED
I INDEX
lttl h.... Haouet for Wt HMtet for W. McMlttt For U. Ho.wt Fw Sale HoltMs for W. Hoetses for W. Howtts for W. Ho.tea for U. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GtMral 1002 G1M.r.il IOOJ Ga1r.t 1002 G...,...-1002 ~.t 1002 G...,... 1001 .,.. .. Mir IOJl CoroH .. Mlr 1021 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Te Place Y•r Ad, Call
642-5678
llOUS£S rot sm
0-11 1«11 !It-l•la"" ICK* 1161\N PY .... ulo ICIO'I <' r-11 .. ~h 111• .,.liar um
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY ..... 11111
:-:: Pllblthtr't Motkt: f-"'·'•11» 1lll4 All real estate ad ~~""'"' ll<oc• :: v e r t I s e d 1 n t h 1 s ~ ~1r:• 1... newspaper is subject to
LHVN ,,1 .. 1 :: the Federal F11r Hous· ._v .. JO lo.CT mg Act of 1968 which :t'l:'..!i":• :: makes 1t Llleeal LO ad-5'11 luu c.,. .. ,_ lflll vert1se ·•any J)f'eference, ~ .. 4;, :: l1mil allon. or dis· ~::.,1;".:~· ''* cnminahoo based on ~Homt.~!• :: race, color. rehg1on, 1£Al mm sex. or national origin,
..,.., .. ,,tor s.1, i.a.o or an antenllon LO make
"""""""'' 1ors.1. 1);1 any such prererence . .... , Property 11?;10., I 1 m i ta t 1 on . or d i 5 • lllsu,fts P:ropen ~ "' a;::-1ory a.ou lr)I•" 1ioo cramanat1on · =~t~~~i.i, :~ This newspaper will not 1~1011< ""'"' '~' knowingly accept any lorO<TltPr~rt> ~ lod1Wn1iProptflt WJO advertising for real ~~::'.;~' Trir ~,1, f: estate wluch as m viola·
SOPHISTIC A TB> UVIMG--fHE COVE
One spectacular bedroom plus den
walk-in clos~t. wet bar, one and 1 ~
baths. best quality in baths and
kitchen you've ever seen. Community
pool & spa. $318.000.
U~l()Uf ·tiUMf~
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Eut Cou1 Highway, Corona dtl Mai
WE HAVE SO Of THE HST LISTINGS IN TOWN
"'"'"'" ~ .. 11 M••••r• 1100 t.ion of the II!!: ___ 1
Or"':S•Co Pr1111 ~ --------SO. CO.AST PL.Ali DttDlei t.•n ...... ~or~':f:~:;Pop ~IJI Oollhouse. No qual. 3br, Ctand Included!
tt.MM•.t'1rm• Cfrou' l7UO ERRORS l~tba 122 000 7u 04"'' lttaJ t:.i•t• t:.rhu11• l!Woi : AdYerliteor1 · · .... >!!!_ 2 up & 2 down on a
""11 t:.1•1t111•••1'41 Mii lhotlld cJ.clr ttwtr ads 1--------HUGE lot, providing ad RENTALS daily .ct report .,,_ MESA VBlDE ditional otr st park mg :t::!~::,~~~ = ron hn•~· TM Avail immed. Chance to to the existing 4 car ~-·"'" °' l n1 U,11 D .. ILY PILOT buy lovely 3BR home. gar a~ e F"a n l as l 1 r c:;;;;:;~::;:: t~:· ;1<.11 "' Ol._t Situated oo quiet cul·de· fmancang , low down and ""'°'"""-' r.,. !: labilty for ffw first sac. Assumable loan of low interest payments ~~~."' ~ i•correct Insertion $98,500. Selling price Asking only S279,500 m °"""'" ~·' l.>!IJ -a.. Sl44,900. Owner Anx best rental area. steps to 4"' f),111 JfW ..... ,. IOUS beach.
s::~·i s *Cote Realty JACOBS RWTY
llOkti.w.-.. .. 1> :":: Homes for Sale & 1 t t 675-6670 a ..... 11onw, •uo •••n•••••••••••••••••• · nves men , --~;.i;::, ~!::\: ~ GeMral 1002 640-5777 OM THE SAMD
.... ~ 10Sll.r<' ....., ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Cute bachelor condo on &i~ii!'.~··• •.ii., FIXER the beach for only ""'"°"R'"'•' ::.;:, MESA VBlDE s120,ooo Perlect for lm...tnai R••••I 1•1111 $88,750 $20,000 down and owner· vacalion home or youni: :::.":~ "'•ntr<1 ~ In Costa Mesa. R 2 lot 3 wall carry 2nd and w1U executi ve For more m
_., .. R ... u1> ""' Bdrm 1 ~2 bath A great provide additional formahoncallusnow BUSINESS, INVEST· buy for builder or financmg help on this MENT FIN'NC£ starter home. Terms lovely 4 bdrm home with
' 111 ~.~ available Call now , sparkling pool Only TIUDI T IO~AL
REAi.TY
631-7370
t::::~:.:; ;,i;; 546·2313 SI 39 , 000. Ca 11 now ~~:::::~ ~i::r..:i) ~ 979.;;370
llOM) tn Loon ~ A ::::.:.~·tr:: ~ LL STA TE
ANNOUNCEMENTS, -
PERSONALS & TEMMIS + POOL REAL TORS .5 acre estate. 4 Br 4' 1
LOST & FOUND Ba. has 1t au. Patrick 1-------·1 NEWPORT SHORES
2 story 3 bdrm. 2 bath
home Rool patio with
vie w ' INCLUDES
LAND! S2SS.OOO!
BIGCAMYOM ~,:·-••• !:~; Tenore. rltr759-1221
We 11 ~M 1rtt U))
Lalt•foulld l-IQJ PttMW\lh• USO blalUubti• ~.i
111\tl' S4IO
SERVICES ~1tto.,.,. ... ,
EMPl.OYMENT &
PREPARATION
Srhool. i .. 1,,.. ...... Joh .. dlf"t•
lttlp ........ , " ' •
MERCHANDISE
(Ult $69,950
$7,000DOWM
~» fl' must stt! Se~unly
.v•.i gated 2 Bdrm condo.
·1 pools. saunas, spas Va
cant and owners anx-
"Aki .. ..,. A<l oow. ,.._, ..," l!OI~
IWlal
.. tl) 1141silil ..... .. m
~
IJ041 COSTA MESA -'<Al CHARMER l«J)
>al 4 Bdrm 2 bath doll imo house Lays on one of the llU7\ IW"!i!i areas largest lots .
...cl Custom decorating and "'" llll() remodeling makes this a
Mflll) value at $1.24.000 Hurry' llfllfj
IO)llj @ SEA COVE ...... .., ... PROPERTIES ltj;.\ ..... 71 ~-631-6990 ......
MESA VERDE
CHEAPY!
1.IHU 20'i Down Owner may 'IQt consider car rying 'fW
''°'° financ1nt! Su~ shafP. 3 --Bdrm 2 ath me with
~ large back yard & patio. IQtl Least expensive m area. A/IO Call for more details -546-2313 Yll1t w1 ... ftff{\tl-1 "" !l!O
11~• -,1;..,
'fl8U -DOVER SHOIES
~HU UNIBJEVAILE
·~ 4 Bdrm. 3"'2 bath master
1..-1 piece. Sweepinri;1ews or 'l!\.l(f
'1).\11 Back Bay. har r lights J:b1 and mountains ,;;u -Customized in every ~l!I(> way Indoor /outdoor
pool, spa, sauna. Owner
·'1111 will carry the financing •7tti WM @""'" '111Jt SEA COVE :rm vli) PROPERTIES r111 '111 714-631·6990 '/iAI »1'.t.J
~lr. MOTIVATED !fir.
117)1 IM THE ILUFFS 'Ill:
»ll) Just reduced $14,000! ,.,,. Seller will finance at tilt
fl ... II~! Beauliful 3 Bdrm ~iU rrden home. Now onlri »7'4 '14C 185,000 ! Hurry. ca I wir. 673-8550 111• tl~ rr-11m1 ¥1$) m.
17)7
'itll ""' t7\:I THMJNG 11'.\ ll7f1 TOWHHOME7 me rm Call the specialists at
the condominium an·
9IQI formation center.
Touchstone Realty
:,:1~~~~~~--
11810 It\$ lilhl
tQ)
!l!l.1S ~-WO
WIT o.,..,. w-. Actlolt
: Udo lale-a&.rftt to street :: l~allon at quiet west
-end ol lllllld. CommWll· : ty beach. teMla. yacht. •~ club, 4 8dnm. 3~ Ba, rou:rmtt klkbro. Owner wm hleo with rmanetnc·
1ubin Tt ofltu·be
cnal.lve. •·•· D.M MFt«•
ON THE WATER
4 bdrm 2l, bath. 2story
home Master bdrm
suite with frplc + much
more' JNCLUDES
LAND! S33S,OOO!
lcAoo lay Prop.
Realtors
•67S.7060•
E.SIDM%LH .
311-CUSTOM
Quiel cul -de-sac in prime E. Side Mesa
Parquet entry Brick
frplc. Tiled kitchen.
Pantry f amily rm Waler filler & so fl ner.
Spa. Enclosed offstreel
RV pad. Giant patio.
Storage shed. Fruit
trees. OWC lg TD at
13% Very nex.ible. Low
6''c Isl TD. Only $175,000.
Call Bob Licata 759-1221
Little it licJ! !
Classified Ads are real· ly small "people to peo-
ple" sales calls with big
readership and big re·
suits! To place your
classuied ad. call today
642-5678:._
Exquisitely upgraded
Monaco on golf course. 3
Bdrm. formal idanmg, family room. assumable
loans. Subrrut all ofrers
Asking $575,000 SI00.000
dwn
CE
IEDBIE ELllNS CO.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
POOLSIDE SETTING
Elegant Condo Neutral Ton es
Two Bedrooms. Two Baths
Formal Dinin g Room -Gorgeous
Sunsets -Super Financing Very
Low Fbted Interest Rate Shown
By Appointment. Asking $220.000. A
"Joy Of Newport".Llsting.
·--..............
759-9100 uc.,. ....... ... .,..c.....
TMT Mltf (!/11:1 1) J'\-\,{ /)'C. ~C..• "U m un \J~ ~Cit.I ~~ -~ r;.;<r ~ 1a.1
,...._, ~y (\A f • rou.t.H
O loorro"9'1 let!o<J ol Ill. ...... l<•O~ -d1 b.-
low to for,. i.... w11111i. -ck
'LSl.l:Y \;
1\YLOR CO.
Ht-:i\LTOHS '>llll"t' IH41>
GEORGIA COLONIAL MANSION
llG CANYON CLUI
A true picture of elt!gance
Overlook mg the 8th green. 5 Bdrms.
612 Baths. Formal Din. Rm. Fam.
Rm ., Bi 111 a rd Rm . Abundant
w/marble & Crystal chandeliers
$2,150.000. Financing available-. CALL
FOR COLOR BROCHURE
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS
2111 SClll~HilbRood
NEWPORT CENTER. M.8. 644·49 I 0
REALTORS
67S.5511
SUPER "E" PLAN IH THE ILUFFS: lllis
most desired mode4 has a lo•efy 9neftbelt
and mountain view. Owner will help wfth
finmciftc). Only 5239.500.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy .• COl"OftO del Mar
67>551 I
SINGLES FIMD
A P ARTHER ~ Dolebout Two adult home. Two Boy Beach big pra vale. separate & bdrms, each with Cull Real Estate
baths Qu1el. pride or COST A MESA
ownership, hidden away Cherry Lake Ana
1 level condo with pool Clean and neat three
and community rec bedrooms. Huge lot with room. Near" S Coast room ror pool plus
Plaza Orlly $88,900. Call recreational vehirle
about terms. 752-1700 s174.500. liij!siM• !!6!!!!!3!!!!!1!!!!!-7!!!!!3!!!!!0!!!!!0!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!_ .. _ •• _.
75 .. 1111
LINDA ISLE
Exciting opportunity' Wide lagoon
view from spectacular architectural
designed 6 bdrm. S bath, playroom.
dark room & den Slip for 2 larg\'
bouts . Sl.350,000.
LIDO ISi.i HOMES
Ft:.1tured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm . 3
bath home. newly redecorated. Prn:ed
to sell quickly al $475,000. Must see
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lgc rN"rl'alton room & 2 patios Beam
l0 eil111gs Great for entertaining
$420.000 Best price for the money
PEMIMSULA POINT IEACHFRONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm.
l' bath custom home . 3700 sq ft
featuring marine room. $1.385.000
WEST OCEANFRONT
Triplex units , xlnt financing $600 ,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
34 I Boy\1d1· Dr 1111· N B 675 · 6161
OCEAMVIEW
MEEDSnc
Now reduced $4-0,000 by •
vacanted owner~' S
Bdrms. huge ram1ly
room 9i.r;. assumable
ISL ' Owner will carry
2nd 3 pm ate beaches
Only S3l8.000 ' Call
673·8550 tMU1
* SI SK DOWM • DESPBATE!
4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home.
Assume hi-balance loan. owe straight note
EXECUTIVE
ESTATE
Custom golr e~tate
home 4;m sq rt 200·
fairwa y frontage' SBR.
4'1Ba. rormal dm rm.
recreation & hobby rms.
2 frplcs. ram rm. sun·
deck, porch. pool & ~pa'
Panoramic \'1ew~ rrom
most rooms. 3 car gar
Storage galore f or
personal pre.view call
Bob Licata rltr 759· 1221.
SUCCESS REAL TY
549-7991 lalboo lslcmd 1006
LEASE om OM
Newport Beach owner is
desperate• Unbeatable terms! Private pool, spa
and paddle LeM1s Lull
ury t.hruout plus 4 large bdrms Won't last' Call
673·8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
••.....•...............
13.5% IMTEREST
10<; down. cute collage,
3 BR 2 Ba. full lot.
S3SO ,000 Ownr agt
H6J-~
FANTASTIC BUY
Remodeled 2 Br + bach
Real cute Lowest pnre
on Island. s.12:5.000
Century 21 Lodl:hart
_?~847
HARIOR VIEW HARIOR RIDGE Submit yOMT own tenfts.
MOHACOMOOEl An exqu151te offering I Oeler down payment or Darling 2 Bdrm plus Elegant & spacious 3 interest on Lhrs nel4
DOCK PROILEM IH study on comer lot. close bdrm + rarruly room 1 Balboa Island home
MEWPOIT IEACH? I lo community lac1ht1es lev home w panoramic l iff Hardtsty, Rltr
60' dock & 2 story Hunt· New listing on fee land v 1st a o r harbor. 67S.28'6
mgton Harbour home. 4 at,$229,900. coastline ocean & night -
Br. 3~. Ba .. ram, dm. 759-1616 lights Prestige. com· Corou def Mer I 022
bonus rm Estate sale. !!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1!1!!!!!!!1!1!!!!!!!1!1!!!!!!!1 ... I fort, luxury & security •••••••••••••••••••••••
$699,000. R.E by Lucia -------• Reduced , now $739,000 434 IEGOHIA I 831 -9944 REAL ESTATE
64
\00w .• ~~~.financmg) A~l. New elegant 4 Br Vic· --------•I .,.,.,.,, torian partial \'U, I OCWRONT PROFESSIONALS 1--------ownr contractor fman
DUf't.EX WANTED INVESTOR'S avail $575,ooo
0 w n er w ii I car rv Come to the action Most DBJGHT
Magnificent views u·p wanted area an So Calif ASSUME 811': loan or
per 3 bdrm. 2 bath & buyer's can afford to 90'« financing available lower 2 bdrm, 2 bath pa y c a 11 L 3 r r y at only t212ri A lot or
Completely furnished Wh itesides. Balboa house S bdrm. 2Ba On
For winter & summer Island Realty. 673·8700 ly SI09.900 Call 0014
REDUCED
TOSEUFAST
rental& Owner has left !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 979 5370
state. Bring orfers A
OCEAN &BAYVIEW
In Jasmine Creek
$385.000 Assume S200K at 12~ OWC 2nd. Int
only 3 BR. fam rm. 212
ba, Call Joyre Olson. 1.S9·~!13 -associated
Priced atS750.000. Make those good LLS.,.ATE household items yoo're I,..
not ustng available to
some other family by ad REAL TORS GeMrol ....................... 1002
BllOKEllS llEAL TORS
l Dl\ W lolboo • 1l Jbb l
vertismg them for sale
in Class1hed Call
642-5678
LINDA ISLE MabNIACENT
ltautiful in tnry detail. Pri•ah luth
CJrffMried entry o•er pool & spo. Two
story with elegant liYillc) rm. spacious
fain.rm. with shp-dowt1 bar: formal dl11
r"'. & a gourmet kitchen. 5 total
b9drooms with lllllrious lftCISfer sutte.
Pi« & slip for l boob. $1 ,395,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
S. n Rn1t41 f''tlf't '""' 'faf,\qf'r"'M 1
/4:1ii ~ C ""'' H""' N~ .. Jlt•i l~ao. 11
631-1400
ti'• M~rnw Ai.•' 11 .. t•.i 1,i..,.t
67Ut00
Sl8C & ANlf ENGLISH MONEY TERMS
C S R M A W N S E C H 0 T S E R R 0
R A H P Y H Z M E S T P A 8 R
0 C S M R E W l A I H 8 H A F P E H
N D I T A G R L T A l R l A L w y T
W R l R M U N I E L E I l R K A S T H
S 0 G R I I P T F P P W T I N ~ Z Z S
W R S P A P Z H P W H R U I I
R E N 0 E Q E Q I A 0 J E G X L L
A 1 N E N G N U R U H T P M N I
E C H 0 N W C R G E C l H L E Q I T R
Y L H Y S E 0 R H H I E 0 N P U M H 0
Y U N N D A 0 E G C T R C 0 E I H R K
S V T 0 S A E R C K C E R H S I T C E
II 0 H P T E L 0 A E T 0 Y M 0 0 U R H
T A U L R P 0 E P R U E T U M E H C T
RESIOENTIAl REAL FSTAfE SERVICES
EMERALD BAY
Desirable for its private beach, its
tennis courts. its pools and park.
Desirable be('ause of the sunsets,
ocean breezes. and family life .
Desirable because this home with
its 4 BR's. family room and formal
dining room completes the scenario
for happy Ii ving. $66.5.000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
R STAR GA'ZEK11 '• llr CLAY R POLLAS:---..--~_,, }( ,_ °""' ........, r;....i. J:i. y At<.,fllltf to f~• Sfoft
To dc•elop m1uo91 for T .. ndoy,
rwod word. corretpO"ding lo "'-"'**• ol ywr ZodlOC b!rll> ltgn
t lOO u-.. .... ._,W11f'I ... _., .,., .. ·-· "'"°"• -~,,_.. ·-'°-,,,...,
n• .. ,,.._.
,,,~ ,.,._ , ..
,, .... <ii
ltllf"" ,. ... ........ ., .... .. ~ ..
llflltott ..... _ ·-.. -., ... ... _ .....
"""" -,,...,
CdMC..,.._D,o
Wff'AlamcliMJ 3 BR Zba or 2+ guest
owner'$ unit. Plus 28r
rental collage All in
sharp cond wlellcel loca
lion. Owner will carry
lge 2nd TD Best bu) In
town for only $280,000
644-7211
~
• RE ~l TORS
SPECTACULAI
SPYGLASS VIEW
H1«hly uperaded 4 Bdrm + family room home
located oo the former
model street ol SpyglaH
KIU This home has all
CDM IUffS the amenitJes yoo would
Above beach, below 1..ant: la.rgelamlly room
Ocean Blvd Semi priv with wet bar and cozy
Rd. Out of tramc 180 used brick fireplace.
degree vie~ Ocean & large yard with spa and
Jetty from every wan a terrafac front row view
dow Prop lane high Lide of the oeean and city
Obie an vest 2 yrs Clear, hghts Priced to sell fast
land incl Sl.250,000 at $629,000 owe P P Appl only D.M. Mcnllal Ur
(_71'!) 673·6.52.5, 673·2210 7 60.0135
C A M E 0 S II 0 R f: S Costa Mtsa I 024
ESTATE. 3 BR 412 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• private beach. enclosed MES,,. YEaDE ctyd w spacious pool "' '"" forever harbor & ocean Outstanding 3 Br 2 Ba
view $695,000 leasehold. home on shady C. M /? (1/ ~ street Owner will carry
,,,4.1/.1 y e-uz, .{,I~ rinan cing at below
REAL £STATE 644.6397 market. rate of interest. Full price only S129,900.
A SUPER BUY '
Live 1n charming old
Corona del Mar and
w1thm wallung distance
Lo the beach' A beautiful
Call 751 ·3191
I BR condo below markl,
$20,000 dwn, 11· 7 /8<"r JO
yr IQ.an assum 546-1883
Sell wat.h EASE!
It's a BREEZE
Clas~fied Ads 642-5678
income unat priced Lo ••-------sell al JUSt $299.SOO ·• 644-7020 • (96tugo ! If it's got
handles
you'll grab
a sale
faster in
Daily Pilot
classified
ads. tall
642-5678
BYOWMER COM duplell. pnd(' or
ownership, pnced below
market . excellrnl
terms. best locallon
7.60·0140 or64H026
Quick Culottes!
•• • • I
Doll Wardrobe!
751 1
~A6uB~
•
•
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday , October S, 1981
THE.
fA~llL't'
CIBCt:S
"They're all asleep. Now we can finally have
some time for ourselves."
BIG GEORGE \ by Virgil Partch (VIP)
•
"I hate Mondays."
'9.\R'9:\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
"Skip his snacks? ... You tell him, Doctor!"
Jl'DGt: PARKt:R
WHEN LINDA MAY 6RfER
TELL& HER ACIENT &ID
MITCHELL THAT 5HE
INTEND& TO MARRY
I DON'T THINK lOll EVEN
HEARD WHA1' I 5AID! I'M
GOING TO OET MARRIED.
eilD'
COUNT ROVEN51\ '(, HE
SIMPLY TELLS HER TO
PACK, TH AT THEY HAVE
RE5ERVAT10N5 ON A
MIDNIGHT RIC?HT OUT
OF PARl5'
1/;~l"(Q/..P
I 1j ]?.OUJV
"' 10-5
1 MATE MONOAY •••
IT MARKS iME.
l!IEC:,INNINC-:, OF A
LONG WE.EK Of A\UPGE~V WllM NO ENO IN SIGHT
ACAOSS 51 Showroom
car
1 Elect. units 52 -ring
UNITED F .. turt Syndtc.te
Saturday'• Poule SoNed
5 lrrlltles 55 Sloppy
10 Clutches 59 Confessions
14 -accompU 61 Mulbetry
16 Chlnt'I Chou bark
62 Sobstance
16 To lhelter 63 New Y ort
17 Maple city
ta MMt dlsn: 84 Satanic
2 .ords 65 -express
20 Non-M Door 1*1
mlgfltory 87 Coln
22 Worte dough
23 Scandll DOWN
24 l'*8nCI 1 Atmott
mMIUte 2 Spice
25 8iflgll 3 Beked goods
28 -14>: 4 Sttp 25 Ruin
AdOf'nt 5 Turned blClc 2t Socllble
32 Farm eound e AbcM 27 CIMtlfled
33 CofM'9 out 7 8ed ~ 28 F.igned
35 A-•-I Crony 29 Hott - -
• ~ -t eun1ng 1oo1 ao CMmlCll
OMce gedgel 10 Lloenled compound
...,.,.. 11 -bfWe: 31 ~·-41 • .,... Mu&. 34 Germen
43 0... out 12 UndelgrOWOI Ng6on ... c.. 1' ........ 37 COmpoue
49 e. tt Conipo11•111 ae a..
41 Ellctof9 21 ~ 42 WClflfllpt
• IO lmOOil l 14 ,_..,,.., l4 lldl
~
47 Al1MI:
2word•
49 Early
Mulclft
51 Cavett
52MD
53 Thought:
Pref.
54 Oo¥1 tigt.
Hl!Mnt
51Aoof ...
57 Stlott cftM ........ .,_...
., ..... ~ha..fll• ............
.. __
1 2
t4
by Harold Le Doux
RIGHT NOW WE'VE 60110
DRIVETO NICE. CATCH A
PlANE TO PA!tl& ... ANDTHEH
TO L05 AN6£LE&! ,.___.,
GET DRff:>SED'
-~--=-=--=-= ... =-=----~--~ .............
---
..
PFA l:TI
IF '1Ull DONT MIND
MA'AM, ro RATHER N6r
TAKE THIS TEST
c·---... ,, I
GOROO
11M TRYIN6 TO
REDUCE TME STRESS
IN MY LIFE
Ft:NKl' •INKERBE..\N
"lfiAT FIRtlT NIP OF
FAU. 15 IN 1HE AIR !
EtCOSE-l'f., NEI~. 1'~£
C,01"1' ~ (,~'{' ~£ COffEE..
. .
WELL I WE.'Vf. LIVED
UF£ 1l> 1HE. RJU8T !
WE'VE L..Ptt:MED,WE\JE
~ , WE'VE CRIED
~ FtlT ~E W~IYI
~ON OOR FAC£5 ...
fOR •ETTla oa Fea •ea11
~~
l'M-l&f. 50M~ lOH ~&
w11.1.. ~E:1.P.
by Charin M. Schulz
I JUST nt006HT IT
WOULP 8E A 6000
PLACE TO STAAT
by Tom K. Rvan
Sri::ARMIN"f, <JUICY
FFWl"f OR A?U~E:
~~?
by Ernie Bushmrller
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
.
by Lynn Johnston
ive.~·T·
EATIT
t:l"TtiEr\,
'
1 A fresh look at death
Superstars quizzed on their views of mortality
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Tho
quHtion la thl : "If, after you
clled. you could come back once.
for a short period of llme, when
would you choose to come back
two years, 10 years. 100 years
or 1,000 years after you died?"
"/\ hundred," said actress
Eva Le Galllenne.
"A thousand years!" said
mathematician Ronald Graham.
"Not at all!" said violinist Is-
aac Stem.
The question, which holds hid·
den meanings, was devised by
psychologist Lis i Marburg Good·
man, and the answers from
famous artists and scientists are
central to her new book. "Death
and the Creative Life."
Ms. Goodman, a specialist in
the .s till infant field of
thanatology -the study of death
-has written what may be the
first examination of attitudes
toward death among acclaimed
a chie ve rs -supe rs tars in
various fields who have made
the most of their lives .
Their views on death were
sometimes startling.
Actor Alan Arkin, only in his
, 40s, said he did not fear death
be c a u se "1 ha ve done my
I thing.''
But violinist Nathan Milstein,
ln his 70s, said he had yet to
fulfill himself -"1 don't feel I
have reached my peak "
Pianist Vladimir Ashke nazy.
in his 40s, said, "I love life , but 1
think I am r e ady to d ie,
whenever. One must be."
The responses from 22 artists
a nd scientists as well as 700 un·
named participants in Ms. Good-
man's study support her central
thesis.
··My idea was that the more
one has lived, the easier it is to
die." says the e bullient Ms .
Goodman who sees death as the
natural completion of a life filled
to the brim .
She quotes a young man who.
dying of leukemia at the age of
30, wrote : "I don't think people
are afraid of death. What they
are UPaid of is the incomplete-
ness of life ...
Ms. Goodman, 59, a Viennese·
born the rapist a nd associate
professor at Je rsey City (N.J.)
State C ollege, became a
thanatologist in mid-life after
traveling with her Army officer
hus band and raising two sons. "I
was always interested in death;
it had to do with my love of
life," she says.
She set out to study celebrity
attitudes toward de ath in the
early 1970s, but her first letters
see king interviews were re·
buffed by aides who felt the idea
was "morbid" and might upset
I he celebrity.
Eventually, s he succeeded in
r e a c h ing s ubject s d ir ectly.
"avoiding spouses, friends and
agents who form a protective
barrier around the m ."
Scientis t s. inc luding some
' Nobel Prize winners. were more
accessible a nd willing to talk
than artists -a surprise to Ms.
Goodman who expected the op·
posite.
Af'~
Psychologist Lisi .Warburg Goodman with her book. the first eI·
ammatwn of attitudes toward death among accla1med achlevers
"With the artists. although
m a n y of th e m we r e very
gracious, there was always the
fee ling they were doing me a
favor ," she says, a nd a larger
percentage refused outright to
a nswer her questions.
·'The scientists wanted to talk
about death," she says. "They
we re grateful to me that I c hose
them even a giant such as
John A. Wheeler," a Nobel Prize
winning physicist.
"The scientists would write to
me afterward and many of them
a s ked for second interviews
because they had more to say."
How does she interpret this
divergence in attit udes?
"I felt that to the scientist,
death 1s an enemy,'' she says.
"They want to conquer it , dis-
cuss it. express it. Also. they are
usually not allowed to confront
s uc h a subjective m atter as
their own deaths ."
For the artist. she concluded,
death is no s tranger.
"They don't need to discuss it
because they express it all the
time . Death is the theme of
great music. poet ry , a rt,
thea ter "
Of a ll the questions Ms Good·
man asked, the most critical
was what s he calls. "the come·
back question," when would one
choose to return after death.
"I figured that would differen-
tiate between people who ac-
cepted the finite quality of life
and those who did not. I felt p~
ple who wanted to hang on to
now, to come back in, say, two
year s, had not lived. They were
not fulfilled."
But som e answe rs were unex·
pected
"T he surprise was the a rtists
who almost all said they don't
want to come back at all. Then I
got to the scientists, and they
said 1.000 years, which is almost
the same answer."
From these r esponses. Ms.
Goodman expanded her thesis.
In a chapter ca ll ed, "Winning
The Race With Death" -she
proposes a view that the life well
lived can end without regret.
"One should strive for all the
things one can possibly do. And
if you have done all of that. then
l don't think death would be a
threat." she says.
"That's m y way of winning
the race -conquering death,
beating it. getting there first . do·
ing my t hing.
Wh at I'm talking about," says
Ms Goodman. "is if one lives
fully. one can get over the finish
l in e be fore som ething else
fi nishes us."
Test research for toxic shock
If successful,, potential victinis could get warning
TORONTO <AP 1 -A test to de termine
whe t.her someone is susceptible to toxic shock s yn-
drome may be available soon. the Canadian Socie·
ty for Clinical Investigation has been told.
tion with the use of tampons by women during
menstruation.
Chow said researche rs compared strains of
the bacterium. staphylococcus aureus. taken from
toxic shock syndrome patients with strains taken
from patients without the disease.
Dr . Anthony Chow, head of the division of in·
fectious diseases at the University of British
' Columbia, said researchers at his s chool had dis·
cove red tha t the specific strain of the bacterium
associated with t oxic shock syndrome a ppears to
be ··physiologically unique."
They found the bacteria associated with toxic
shock syndrome behaved differently from most
s taphylococcus strains in the way they destroyed
blood cells in the laboratory. This characteristic
provides a way of identifying the toxic shock syn-
drom e bacteria, he said. The laboratory test that
identifies the toxic shock syndrome s train is
"relatively simple," Chow said.
Toxic s hock syndrome has been wide ly
publicized, in part because of its apparent associa·
McCOltMla( MOITUAIUH
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna H111~
768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·t 776
HAltl<>lt UWK-MT. OLIVf
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
t 625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
rtHCI HOTHllS
IB.L llOAOW A Y
MOITUAIY
t 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
6<12·9 150
l.ALnlHGHON
IMITH & TVTHILL
WUTCUHCHA'IL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
rtHCIMOTMHS
SMITHS' MOaTUAIY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
~
~ew hospital?
SAN DIEGO !AP>
Kaiser-P e rmanente is
ask ing permission to
build a 200-bed bospital
in Helix Heights, a site
recently rejected by the
Navy in favor of rebuild-
ing in Balboa Park.
He added the disease can also occur in men
and ill non-menstruating women as a result of
wounds or skin infections or after sureery. The
classic symptom s -high fever, severe drop in
blood pressure and s kin rash -are identical in all
groups, Chow said.
If unchecked, the disease can result in kidney
and heart failure. The death rate among these
cases is nearly 8 pe rcent.
Hartford opera 'Aida'
a REALLY big show
HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) -The
Hartford Civic Center coliseum,
normally the home or a professional
hockey team. is preparing to be host
to a cas t of performers including
elephants. camels, horses and dogs.
But it's not the circus. The four.
footed creatures are the bit parts.
The stars -ln theory, at least -are
opera singers.
The Connecticut Opera is perform-
ing "Aida," and ls billlng the produc·
tion the "largest indoor staaJng of
Verdi's masterpiece ever mo\lnted in
lbe Western Hemisphere." An IuUan
arand opera composed by Git.11eppe
Verdl, "Alda" WU nnt performed in
1871.
One month from debut, lbe cut in·
eludes more tban 300 1in1en, 500 ex·
tras, a lar1e producUoo ttaff and troe 20to.O anlmall. ' Thon wtll, at tJma, be more lb.an
TOO people oa ataattal once," 1US
i
George Osborne, general rurector or
the Connecticut Opera.
Singer Mignon Dunn, who plays
Amneris, Aida's rival, wants to ride
an elephant, even though tbe script
doesn't requlre it.
·'They promised me I could ride an
elephant,'' s he told reporters at a
promotion luncheon. "But Georse
u ys it's too dangerou.t. Maybe in tbe
second or third show.·'
He might allow her to ride • cemel,
but, "I don't like camell too well,"
a be said. "I want to ride an
elephant."
The animals, a top priority ln the cast, were chosen lo a .one-day audi-
tion ln Aucust.
"We'd 1lped IOIM ol the animal.I
before man>' or the slftcen," Os~
noted.
Will the animal• UPNt• tM lOP-pame perlormera?
"Of tOUrM,'' .... DuDa aald.
----· -·---------·
~~g Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. Octol>er 5, 1981 •I
Drug to aid
blood vessels?
WASHI NGTON <AP J Drugs that Interfere
with th~ accumulation or u e ol calcium In the
body can prevent hardening of the a rteries in
m onkeys and possibly in humans. scientists sa y.
If\ a report published ln Science mauzine, r e-
seu chers said anti-calclfymg agents suppressed
fatty depos its in the large blood vessel8 of macaque
monkeys fed high ·fat diets.
Or. Deiter M. Kramsch or the Cardiovascular
Institute at Boston Univers ity Medical Center said
t h e d iet s, loa d ed with butte r a nd added
c holruiterol, caused fatty buildups in the vessels of
untreated monkeys during two years of feeding.
But monkeys getting the anti-calcium agents
showed substant.J ally less large a rtery blockage
and hardening -termed atherosclerosis -while
eating the same diet. he said.
Atherosclerosis is a specific large-vessel type
of arteriosclerosis, a group of diseases manifested
by blocked blood passageways. Clogged vessels
are the unde rlying cauiJe of heart attack, s troke
a nd other disorders that kill 900.000 Americans
each year
The ne w study comes a day a fter the govern·
m ent re leased a report saying the death rate from
cardiovascular diseases declined 25 per cent in the
last decade.
The decline 1s dr amatic . the report satd, but
heart and vessel disease still is the nation 's No. 1
killer a nd needs mor e research and preventive
measure~.
Kramsch said in a telephone interview that he
and his colleagues. Dr. Anita J . Aspen a nd Lynn J .
Rozier , found that all the anim als on the hig h-fat
diet developed blood cholesterol levels three times
higher than controls on normal diets.
· But in the case of the animals getting anti·
calcium agents. t he high blood fat levels did not
lead to muc h fatty plaque accumulat ing in the
vessels, he said.
Several of the stages of Catty, fibrous buildup
in blood vessels require calcium. Inhibit ing this
mine ral deprives the process of C\o vital com ponent.
Kramsch said.
Three of the anti-calcium agents are com·
plica ted chemicals that attach themselves to exist-
ing calcium in the vessels and prevent new de·
posits of the mineral. he said. These drugs a re
used cli01cally in Europe to treat other heart dis·
ease. he added .
A fou rth anti-calcium agent, lanthanum . is a
so-called calcium antagonist that controls the
passage of the mi ner al into cells.
Kramsch said the agents that prevent calcium
accumulation appear lo have no adve rse effects on
the body in the doses used. At high doses, however,
they can interfer e with calcium absorption into
bone. which may prove a problem with younger
people. he said.
·'This approach looks prom ising enough to
continue research. if we get the money," s aid
Kramsch. whose work was funded by the National
Heart. Lung and Blood Institute.
400 boys whipped
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP> -A
hig h school headmaster has whipped at least 400
boys at Bryanston High School for wearing their
hair longer than school rules allow, the Rand Daily
Mail reported.
The newspaper said headmaster J . Viviers
co nfirme d a "large numbe r had been
reprimanded" but said all the pupils had cut their
hair "in a very good s pirit."
PUil.iC lllll
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4 L .. Mllold lmen1t In -to LOI
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lSOI Llgl\0-M L.ane, Corona .,., Mar, California
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of Oetaun -Otm-few Sale, -wrllten notlo of IW•-'<11 and of alaellon lo cauM llllt -..1191'*1 lo Mll Mild pr-rty lo wtltfy Mid oblle-llofw, and t1MrNl1« Iha ~19"ad <..,MCI wld notice of -II and of electk»ll to
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City of CoAa Mew, C-. of Of' ..... Sl•I• of Collforllla !Mt a bulk trMtfer Is aboul to i. mMe to PAUL DOAN. Trenste,.., -Wtl,...S acNr"s 11
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of Celllornla. Tiit llV4k ttantter wlll 119 ,.,, .. .,., .. ma led on ot 8fler ttw 2111 Ol'I' of O< · tolltr, ltll Ji. IO:to e.m. et Westem Mulu•I EK.-Corp.. Attll AroSlt1'
Rwuell, ---II ,., So. Yo;be, Suite IOI, TW'lln, Collfomla. Thal Ille IHI elate tor 1111119 clalmt In Ille H<,_ rtleffed to 11er•ln 11 Qc. tol>er 20, 1"1.
So tar .. Is~ to Ille T,,_.,.,"· all "'"'""'_,,...end addl'-uMd by lllt Tranlleron tor OW pHI lllr ..
vears •r•: Same. OATIEDS., 2S, '"'· p.,, Doan,
Tr_... .. Pub11.-Oranve Goast oany Piiot.
0<1.s,1•1 ~· plied, ,._,01no 11~. -~•Ion "' encumbf'..c.H. to pey tM r.ma1n1no principal wm • ti. nowltl -urad by wld Oted ol TrU'lt, wltfl lnle,..11 ft In wld -.-.,...,..'-!, adYanc•, If ..-y, 1------------.....,., ,,_ w-flf wk! De.cl of Tl'\dt, MOTICa INVITING llDS IHI, charges and upensH of lhe NOTICE IS HEltl!I Y GIVEN that Trutl .. _., o1 tN 1rvs~ c .... 1ac1 by Ille loard of TrvslaH of , .. Goast wld DMcl •Trust. CommU11lty Coll• Dlatrlct of Ofan ..
Said wii. will be IWld on W9dnesdaY, County, C.llfOmla, wlll recel.,. -lad Oc tober a. 1''1 •I 1:00 p.m. et ,,_ l>kll "" lo tl:OO em . TllMdey, Oc· Cl\apman A--r...u IO ~ Clvk lober IJ, tttl al Ille PurCllatlne Center 1N1ldlno. lDO Earl CNloman Otpart-of Yid col ..... •lnrlct A•en11e, In tlle Clly of Or•nt•. located al 1310 Adefftl A-. C..U Calltornla. Mesa, Callfornla, 81 wflldl ~im. w k! At 91• 11-of llW lnUlal publication bids wlll i. publkly _..., ...., read of llllt notice, tho lotel ........,., of Ille for. 11npe ld be le11c e of tlle ob· PUllCHASI OFASIHGLITUIE ll getlon u cur•d llY Ill• •bo ... X·ltAY GENERATING UNIT, O.Krl-~ ot trvsl -"llmateo OR ANGIE COAST CX>LLEGE co sh, npensu . •lld adv•ncu Is All bl4* are to be In ecc.Of'dane:e wltll Ul,St2.47. ti. 81d Form lnttructl..,s and Condi· To determine , .. openlno bid, you lions •nd SpKllkallons w111c11 are now mey u ll t714) '31.-., on Ille and may be MCll...S In Ille off!« Del• s.p......, U , 1'11 of 1M Pu<dlMlnQ "-''of said c.oll-
~ Pacific dltlrlct. FundlnQ, Inc Eecll blddtr """' 1ubmtl wltll ttls .. Wiid Trust•. bid • CHiiier'• clleck, carOflad C'll«k, By T .D. SaNI<• Co., Of bidder's IJOnd -... yable lo -AQent cwder of ti. Coast ComlftWlllY COii-By Lorrie -..ac11. Ohlrlcl 8oard of Tr.,slfft In •n Aulltatll SKrttary amovnl not -_fl.,. -cant 15%1
One Clly 81¥0. WHI, of Ille """ bid n a guar-.. ll'lllt Ille a.-.. , Collloml• .... lll~r wlll tnltr Intl! the Jlf'OPONd 17141 ~ Contract If the .-la awarded lo P11bllsrwcl Orange Co4tl O..lly Pllol. lllm. In Ille • ....,, of fallllre lo.,.,.,.,,,. Oct s. 11. tt, 1'11 07Mt to sucll coritract, , .. pr«-et -
-----------ctw<k wlll i. fOf'feltad. Of In llW ._
PUlllC NOTICE
NS-85074
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
B IRDIE THEODO RA
J O HN SO N , ak a B .
of .. -·.,. tutl ...... UlerMI •Ill be forfeited lo wild cot .... dlllrlc1. Ho bl-may wlllldr-his tlld for a period of 1or1y.11 .. <'51 clays altltr uw .UI• tae for.,. _nlno 111eteo1. T ... 8-d of TrU'I-, ... ,.,... Ille prlvll ... flf ,..Jectlno .,,.. and ell l>ld1
UIOALNOTICI NOTICITOCHDITOltJ TH EODORA J OHN SON or 10 wol,. any ltn9utarltlet •• In· tormalllles In any bid or In h bicMlnQ. HORMAN E. WATSON
Sac:Ntory, N°'k•••,.,....,801
1,,...0 ~~~._ 1!>~ .. ·,u~_T1161~u1'".c•.!,1 AND OF PETITION TO of0r..,..c-ic.,,i ,.., .. .,~....,... ...... ~· •• '" STER ESTA T E F-aln Vaff.,, Callforllla t210I, llas HOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN to Ille ADM IN I made ..,..katl., wltll lhe Fe•ral credlton of AT OF CALIFORNIA NO. A· 110S1S
Board of T,..I_,
Co9$1 c--lty Col I-Olttr lc1 OapHll lntwr enu Corporation, I NC. Ca C•lllornl• corporellon>. T 0 a I I h e i r s , W.U.ln9lan. o.c. »at, few Its wrltttn Trenst.ron, -bvllneu _, .. ,It b f · · • di t Publl-Oranve Coast Oally Piiot Sapt tt, 1911 .!"! ... c-• ao "*99 w11t1 eoc llMfVa• 110 So. Brlstol Street. Clly of Costa ene 1c1aries, e re o r s Company. Mu•. County ol Orenee. Slot• of a nd contingent creditors Of
Tiit. -lea '' pulllllNd ~I lo California, 111a1 • bulk trantler 11 Birdie Theodora Johnson, Nil.JC !Im sect._ 11 <cl of -.._ .. , 0..-1· abo111 10 .,. made to COLLI NS· a ka B. Theodora Johnsont------------lnwrance ~ My ,__ wltfll"9 lo HILLEIOE MANAGEMENT CORP ...... c.om-., INS ..,..k.Clon must lilt l • C •1 lforn la cor por at lu I , a nd persons WhO may be MOTICa TOCOMTltACT~I com...-s1n-11now1t11tt.11avi-1 Trantfwrws, -butlneu Address otherwise interested in the ProJ«1Ho,e1s1R o Direct,., 01 111e Fed•••• Depotll I•.,. Hellolr-A...nue, s .. 11. 28, Cl· will and/or estate : s..a1ec1 .,,..,...., w111.,. -•I"'"' at lnswrtnce Corpontlon M Ille R..,._I ty of Corona del Mer, County ol Ille offka el Pl-o,.retloM OIHf 001ca • .,. MIW!t...,_., sire«. Suite Ot•noe,SWt•of Calltornla. A petition has been filed "'"lantoi-wt...,.111,Felrv~Sl.M• .oo, s.. FrMCbco, Callfofftla •~IN. T,,. property 1o i. ,,..,,.,.,,... 11 by Fa rmers & Merchants MtHlltal, uo1 Hat11or e1...i .. c:.sta
Any,.,_, ..... ,_• Pf'OI•'"" ti. °"'''-"'..,..,.., .. ean•ln II•· Trust Company of Long ...... c.1". •• IMlll 2:• "·"'· ... ~~'::'.°!.~~M~•~::~::~ ~.·~'1~~•'n~;~k~:::o:c! Beach In the Superior 0e1. n, 1"1,.twt11e11t1mtti.yw111 11e """ ..., . ..,. " • C t f 0 C t "°'bllCIJ ............ rMd tor pertorm. ofllltll lnlenlwllflltll lttllkWll Dlrec· ARTHUR TREACHERS FIS H & our ~ range oun y lngw"1l .. "lt00flt1Ef'Allt$". tor by .._._, '· 1t11. can1id9"!1a1 CHIPS, -~led at 770 So er1tto1 request mg that Farmers Fumltll e11 !MW, tMtwto11, 1oou
portion• • .,,. ..... le.ti .... ,.. .. fllt SI•"'· City ol COiia MeWI, c-v of & Merchants Trust Com-and .......,._Ill<_., '° It...,,,_ In tM R.,._I Offic.'1 pert of , .. Oranoe. State of C.Hton1la. f'I•< lltl"I roof\ et • ._ I(. T & llUbll< flt malMalNcl by ... Cor-• Tiit bulk tr41nlfer wlll ... con.um-pa~y of Long Beach be ap-;; .... ~:i, • cpmb!MllOll t~ ~kll, lloft. T"9 Ille It av•I-•.., ~'' ,,,. meted on"" ••ter 111e 1111 clay 01 Oc· p o 1 n t e d a s perso n a I 1•11• and ""'"'41 er•Y•I bulll 1111 -•ion-'"' 111e ,_, .... 111n1neu 1ot>er,1 .. 1a110:00A.M.atWESTERN r epr esent a t i ve t o a d -'su•em. work 111a11 1nc1 .. ••: f. "°""· MUTUAL ESCROW CO RP. ATTN. ministe r the estate of 1temon' ,._.ace nJst1nv ,_.,,.. OATEOSllpt. 21, 1'11. AltOITH RUSSELL. --•-It . . membrane d0w11 lo ln.111aUOfl. I . n.a-flfOr.,..eounty uot1 So. YorN, Suite 101, Tusun, Birdie Theodora J ohnson, 1te,1ou c1eter1oral9" ""' nr1,,, 10101 siei1 .. A-ca111 .. n10 . .,,.., ""IHt dale tor 1111n9 aka B. Theodora J ohnson. c11rn. wooc1 """"· *· i. 11.,.1«• ... Folftaln va11..,, CA '270I claims In tlw eKrow reftrl"9CI 10 ,,.rein 1or ttll .,... me(al lttflll 114ec11
BOC Met9er Compeny I• Oclooer2'0, ... 1. Laguna Hills, Ca (under ~-: .... • s. Caoolk all 101!1. of m.t•I 1010tS1MerA-so hr u 11 known 10 tll• the Indepe nd e nt Ad· flatll l"I. 6. Install MW roet ftfltt ........ nVallt'1'.CA'21GI ~:~:;:.'°' ........ 11111' .. yHrsall ministra tion of Estates every 1,000 14. ft, '· Rapla<e ... •tllLIY, etUMILE , WAOMalt, I ..,.. ~-8_. _,St -C 1 />Ct}. The notjtjon is set for t.,.lortted ar _....,. IMlllMIOll, n M••••, UM091t1a1to a MAMLaY . L-_,,.,, .. st~ r~, .,. a . ...-neceswry 91 Fa1,,.._ Steil•..._.. .. ,
O.c.Rlr'f ,._ Mew, C•llfomla hearing In Dept. No. 3 at In occordance wllll p1a11t and 111tc:.rr,.-•_. 2. n m T•-Circle, Fountain 700 Civic Center Drive apeclfk.t'°"'!Mf'...,..
u. ......... CA..U vai1t~.Calllorrt1a West Santa Ana CA 92701 Pref•rtta w111.,. ., • ..., t•""" ...... ltlwd Oral9 Goa•I O..lly f'llol, l. S1' Eul hi SlrHI, Tuttln, , , .... p.......,ty .............. "S-11
-· 21 • Ott. s. 11, tt, '"' 4*'41 ca111om1a on October 28, 1981 at 9: 30 lutlnau" "'ec<OOWMe w1VI 1tc1IOl'I
PVIUC ll~E
NOT•C• OP auuc T•AMS~•· •
llac1 61"1-4117 U.C.C.) TO WHOM IT MAY CONCIEllN: Noll<• h llereby gln n lo tllt Creditors of CHIN TEN HUANG, Trenst•nw, -lluslMIS addrns It '5 Pertola. 1 rvlne, CA '21U, County of Ora...-. Sitt• of C.llfomla, lltal a !Nik
tronsfer It •"°"' to bt m•ll• 10 eltOOKIE IEN TL£Y end 80 BENTLEY. Tramn ...... -llUSI· !Mta eddt9M It 1151 Port Wtltbourne, f'lace, Newport leach, Co11nly of Ora119t, St• of Calllonllt nMO. Tiit ~ to lie lr-fttl"9CI II locettcl .. ,.,, East CoH1 HI ..... ,. u1111 e, c.r-•• Mar. eo-ty of Of'.,..., StN of Cell'°"'4a nus.
Seid .,....,,., I• oe1Crllled In 91Mral as: All 141Ck In trao., fhrtu,..1, eoulp.
mant -..-i Wiii of IMI flsll -<llltls rna-am tlUtlnatt k-••Sir ltHteur.,.. --et m1 East Caa11 H~, un11 e. c--c1e1
Mor, County of Ortntt. State ot Colll0r11lo f2'2S.
Tiie bllll trONl9r wlll lie c-""attcl °"or"""' tlW Hnl lley el Oc· lo'9f, 1'11,-CleltM may '9 llled al Wl!l.U FAltOO eAHk, N.A., lac.-°"'9"-". lte; IKrew He. '4-... , 1411tt tne, MO Newport Cefller Drlw, Ntwpor1 9Mcll, c-ty flf Ora1199, , ..... ., C:.'"""8 '*°' All <IOllN _, '9 -efftd •I tMa --*'"-' "" .. Jiltls day .. OctMK, • ••. "" ..... INlll trOfttftf ..... ln-<111*• tlle .,....., flf ,,._,lie-. In Wfllcll ~ all (IOimt """' be ,... <elWd pn.r W tM ..._ M ""lctl Ille lj, ~, tie.-I• tr-Jerrell 1W 1119 Offer1-' .. AlctNfk .. ,,.., ... ~~-.. ,., .. ~ '° ... ltM9 ...... , 1911 "81---tlld---lltH
"' ff ...... .., ... """' .,..,. lett
""" ,, ........ '""'""' ...... 9'9! IM'9 ...... .
Daled: ,_.,........,. 2', ,,., AM . '""· tt. tell .. Tittt 1, Col...,,,.• A• COLLINS.-HILLEIOE I 1 F YOU OBJECT to the mlnlslrttlft eo.. "-'IC•ll-.., MAHAGEMEHT CORP . prtterenc>t must i. Niimi"-' to -•C.lltorn1ec..._•11on gra nting of ~he petition, Stn•ll 8..,....,, Oftk•, JI!~ · '~!' T,.,.,.,..., you should eithe r appear street, Sau-*. u. Mii•.,.. '-S BY IE R HILLE80E. at the hearing and state ""' ''" UI (-dtYI In...,_. *,....,.,IT,_..,.., . I . ., 1114 ....,.~ -"''' ~· I IV: JOHN E. COLLI NS, your ob1ect on or fife writ-~ ......... ~..;..... ............ .
Prn!Oent ten objections with the.., proJ«t c•tucetdlsu.•. Publl&llad Oranve coast D•11• Piiot court before the hearing e1d .,........s """'.,. "*""""',., O<t. s. 1•1 w, .. , Your appearance may ~ ,.,. entire _. -.er-.-"""'"· °'"'°''-,..,., ....... .-Cit~ in person or by your at-11t11••l"••<•••r.i ... w111 .. torney. ~·111e .. , ••!KU-<tf .,..., TIM NMIZ» IF Y 0 U ARE A _,,,,,....,... ... rleM•wal .. ..,y NoTtca TO e11ao1T01ts C R E D 1 TOR t 1,,....,.,11, '"• '*'"'" ~·.,or O"'IULKTltANS,llt or a con -•ll•lft. ts.a.""'"" u.c.c.1 ingent creditor of the de-No 111c1 """.,. <......,.. "'*•" •• .,,:0~~,e,.:~':::,•11-=!,°~:"=~ ce1 a1sed, y1outh mthust filertyour :.--o:;::,::-:.~::.:T:. llulk 1r..,,.... is ~ ,0 ._ ,.,... on c a m w e cou or c.,....Mt wlltl -"'"""°'',.._." ... perton•I proper ty ~erelnafter present It to the personal Oen",
"f~'~..., IM""" eddr ... of rbeprtehsentat~ve ~tphpol lnfted ..,:-=:~;::,.:::"':: 111• lnten-transfertr ere : Al Y e COU WI n our .,....,_...,UMMl•wmellltofe,... Ga11de11t1, Ao Al'• Tl>erna• Safety months from the date of t••otJ1te.,11aCHet""-"
s..,,.•<•. ,... w.11 20ttt stnot, cooie first Issuance of letters as o"'•"-•t '"' • .....,. ...,...., ~=--:.=-:~..!.= r~~vl~o1~a~'roJ~ ~: ~=~::=:::: wa11011...o1ten RfU99brllMl, 1111 Ho. Callfornla . The time for ce•••Hct ,,_,..... • .......,--.. or ... •. •H • ......,....,, u.-. fifing claims will not ex-ctlltrect ~ • ,,.. •-. "' Tl\et .. -..__..__.,_,...II tltl(ftlt/ftt•-Oetcrlllell i;;t;;.7 ~~1" plre prior to four months TIM ~-_.ll*r .,1, " ,... iwoe.a. ,,_, .. ..__. 111ep .... ,.,. from the date of the hear-... 1 .... 10 •11te11t• • <•~r'r:J
IMllt, 111t1....,,. ""let ~t -Ing noticed above ... __. 111 .. "'"""' •' 11 I.coted .i! NI w.&1 *" St""4. ' """"'*"" ........ t'' ....... '9 c.u-.e.u. YOU MAY EXAMINE ~_. ...... .,~_. ™ _.._. _"'"'"" t11o .... the flle kept by the court. 1,_.....,....." .. --. tr•n•ferw .t Miki 1ou11an 11· Al'• t f you are Interested In the •• "~,.. • •• ' Pl • ~~9:".!<;~i.int911111Mio estate, t°"' may fllt • re-~._."" 1"'.:. ~ ~:
tM Cetltll-td at lflt OttlO tf. QC~leVSf!t ~1.the1 notCOU)(rtf OftOtr!:. ........... ~.-~ .. • Otw11 tire llNll, 1!111., A11oi.tlm, "' ~ ,,. _,.,, ........ ea11..,,..,..,..,_0t_tt,1"1. I • ~ st ._ t _. 11 •• ..... ._ ,_ TIM __ ..._.,.,..._ nven~ory"' 1 a ... asM s ............ ..,._.., ...
""" wMln <l•I""• may .. lllecl 11 and of the petitions, ae-otlNctM ................ ....... 1t011e111 wut•ll 01111/or llen counts and reports~---,...-••• ,......,.. .. •..a*·°"""'°· UMt described In Section 1-....... ., • .,..,===,... eM, AMMifl'I. CA ... ..i tN i.t 4 ""1 ~ ~ .....
.. y ._ tllMt clOltM .,., ..., ,,... ofc_J!" C..llfomta Problw ...... ...,. •• _.. DAH.Ooc-..rt, t•t. ......... .... ..., T......._.
Wit.~ •. ,......,..... uuw. ...... .... .
• Wt!MUM¥...,...,_CJ_..nll'lllt..,. WllllamO Heytw • =r:i-·--~ •::?:::: .. _.. ........... AU.,.,.., at Law -.°': .... 'l:l:r'
,..,...,._ ............ ,...,.....,_, -·-...... strMt. .. ....... -' * ..._.. ... t._.. ....._ ft.O • ._ _ __________ ._..._...._ ...... -.. ..... 8elCll CA~
Cadillacs toOo-<:arts ~ ~r'::"~,~· Tel: (tu) iWfli Wha~tbeFad . _.. PubUINd Or CO.It
RoU 'emolltheM•rtce& ---:: ... With a CIMaif)ed Ad ...... ;; -Dally Ptlot. Oct. J, •• '
Call Now! eo.M78 ....... -. o.11 _.,...,. 1911
on. ...... --
f'Wfl ... Or .. c-1 Dell>, lll'ftte,
Oct. s. ,.. CllM1
; .
• ...... .. Wt . OIMrlttl•.... ....... ......u. .. 'i•1 • ~ ......... ,,,, ........ . M Orlllgl Cout DAILY PILOT/Mond1v. October 5, 1981 •A••••••-.. ••••• .. • ....................... ·····-··••••••......... •••••••• ......... = ........ ............... .. ........... ' ......... ~ ll... 1 t I tr .. "' • ..._hr.. ..._.,.,.... ..._.,.w. ..,.. ~~~~ ... !~cu,,1irwfll ''" ... ,,.c,+ '' iuo=.~-!~~~ ..... -........ :.,···-.· .. ····~··n-···· -··••1eeen1u 1n11e 1eeeu••1111•1UHU tl • ee1e•eu1u1e11•1uee11 t ••eee111111H-nue fhl "" 9"J' "J . 1 •• Oralilsttff • ' • ' -' Celli._ IU4 .._ lb I Ml•peu'f .... 116t ....................... ....................... J , C:.... . • ... ,,_., .. aitcw. faarm.llW~ ........ _." ............ -.......................... -................ -...... ~a!:.'~!i:! llTA.1.MUtlll ~.~ ==d· :r: I br, •• 2 ... oeeaa ~:. ~ coenm.: •. + -... Will
COAITM.I ·= Tt••• "'-DOWN w U maiataIMd bome rr.so Ml· fl. Nft oner ar •lew. TeHla, poola. all allldit.lel. No. pet.a. P HOMlroltlENT
c.&, c~. 4 BR ll•DOWM TOWMllOMl7 OWC Wtltelitt 4 Br 2~ re:turin•IBdrma.4'1111 ~1:d ic:.11G,Q::rbor ....,.:.,.:. a Bdr m -rtnttd ..._. .,.._ i~ ml 1a lrlaa Jabil br1111b • CaU ti.. 1pedallata 1t Ba. ooty 81'11.500. N0tm balll.a, &OW"GWlt kitchen. Jlfa'9ci · · ' f7$.f7oo ......_ 1700 c..te MtM JJJ4 NORTHWOOD-aBrl 28• yard a ..,.,.. Kldl •
bitt cft lricl (tit Ooruft. ~.'°.r't"'*~ll1 th coodomlnlum In· 6 Kuey MdCJnley rltn. Jumbo family room. ee.lel ~ •••••••••· ... •-•••••••• •••••••••••n•11••••••• home. Beautlfu up· pet.I welcoine. 145-2000. lr-y llltcheft.. rut11rt1 •Vf "" ,..QI.I.I«,.._, rormaUonCtlll.er. lll·U.otl4M4t:l ltoom ror boat or RV C•••-·-ew• Lovely 1 Br 2 Ba. aradedblempvtculde I CMli l1oor plua colorful Kua area. Cr.,tlvt Touc..._.IWalt.y pit.IS acarpr.,e. Home M9ttfw 170CI PllSTlelOUS Eutelde, carpell
1 1ac. •n mo. Aft. Kyle ·
dttoraUve relllnJ Miler •*11MU!15'8-1501 haa excellent 1tora1e •••••••• .. ••n•••• .. ••• CUSTOMHOMI drapea, b·UJll, eacleo 1 1 __ Avail. now 2 Br. 1 Ba.
Lar .. ~ f:Uo lot or'IS2-1211_ and terrlftc curtnppeal. la raUbroal. with 7~ 1• r . 1700. No pet• 2 bdrm condo R.uRboSan Water • trub paid,
outdoor •Oler al.nln1 c * •l.£VllME! $431.000.CaUAMP«era Reduced to SUl,50Q acm Pt'Odlldnl &rove Sava e Wilde ' Co Joaqlrl.n Golf count f:~~·· ~·/e0..:tt·
,,..Ible llawlrul. 0.1> 11111 "''"""""' ·-· 642-IJOO UR, !BA CG*. 1 " All 1meoltlet. Sp" . ,~ •. lll)o< ~..,.. A + 1 .... -. · Walke r & lee
Rul lslat11 llll.MO!Call~ eel 4 Bdrm Northwood WISTOCIAJROMT new. KllNY uwaded t.acular viewl from all 8raodoew•pacioue(1700 Nopet.a.lllOO~-tat e:.flf
COLDweu
BAHl\eRO '~I I'd) I
home frallll'ft ILi own Triple•. Xlnt tenru , T 11 e. W a 11 lo w •II rooma. Many kinda o1 aq n > ZBJUBA. Dlnlnll 1cc:.i••~••Nlll•!ll!•,_, pool, apa, and separate prime location. MOO,OOO. carpet•. Wall paper. family fn.dt .. Pvt party rm/ilucly Multi·leveled L..pM .._. JZ4' U.fa • • 14 1421
play yard. Owntr 11ys A&ept, f7Hlfl. Landacaped, enclosed wlll tr11de/f1.nance w. ~wnbomt. fri>!c, vault· ............................................ ..
try small down. This patio. Pool. Tennis, Jae. ZO'Xt down. $4.85,000. eel celllnp. Pool, spa. OCEANFRONT Mobile llONIOf RICHAMD seller la Jenulnely OWMBWILL •1.000 +1uwnable lit HP·l81S. mo. N88 Homea $1000 mo. Obi THILUCnNW WAIN motivated. TIM ldva.n· LOSE MONEY. 135/8~. ()perl Fri.Sat' OVER 3 ACRES r.oned Wut•ide 2 Br 1 Ba. wide. 18 Rent ill Cotta Meu'a •-lllllm~~~~~·I This 3 Bdrm. 2 bath ta&e! Just reduced to Thal'• ri&bt ! Owner 11llO °''AYIM& ~= i'c!,~ a~~ ~~ A·l. + remod 3 BR 2 Be. Houae, enclsd 1ara1e. •BEACH HOUSE• eoir. NEW EST sated 20
home is sllic'•Plll The $239,000 wlllina to lake a loM on IHCOMITAX? Capo Off A.llpu, romer bm~. Th~=~ !: patio, w/d ho.ok·up. IBR. rfllk, beamed eel · Townhome VILLAGE IM'TmAtmS added (amlly room g ~brtdge Ulil property. Du~u, 4 Row about an oeean of Del Obispo. Agl &Q. ·CCI : t 2nd carpctt It cwwn1. No in&. Courtyard. S Lag. COMMUNITY. 2 • 3 Br. ~ crutes a beaullrul a .. .,.ltU SBd344+.0003Bd. c'!W'"oa:r~n rrootdup"xwit.b~.000 Pacific Company ~..-dwnA&tn&f.2-4447 pets. $425m-urlty. Smo.485-4416 2i,,B1.1eoo 1800aq.ft. IASTSIDI courtyard entry. Near ~· ayearlncome.CaUBUI 499.s&40,•~. .4380 · · • S48-HUor TOPOFTHEWORLD ofpurelwtury.Gar11ea. Auumable VlR r1nanc· So. Coast Plau. flexi 551 3000 Paah for mott details. M u EA.STSlDE cute l Br cot s br 2 ba, din. area, bydro·tubt ln muter
In& available on thili blese1Jer say1submlt on • rltre:tl-1.B erN · I ... It.. tace. semi.furn .• nice stove, washer/dryer 1111ih, formal dining
charmins, Ught and airy terms. Fa bu Io ua mt •n l'kw),lrvlru~. ~HI/ hdtmp 2100 nelsbborhood. $430 I.at, hooltup. gar .• end. yd, rooms, wood. burnlna
home . Featuring 4 bargain, suing Is DMhS. llOG ••••••••••••••••••••••• last 4't secur. Mary 1000.964·1611lal'l. m. fireplaces, aucro·wave Bdrm . plus fam ily believing! $127,900, S6100DOWH ....................... Maanlficent CdM Ocean ~7·2CMO LARGE 3 BR 3 Ba. oveOJ, reocect palloe '
room, enclosed 7S2·1700 ASSUMlf.U t/o 12 Un its Costa Mesa. View Pool Homite. Tn.hmebl·level rpc,3Hr ram/rm rp1c bl1vard yards. Private .. eJeaant rd 1o 11 ba It I w . sm11 dn. t"'. sno ooo SZ50 <m equ y • lot • • • ., • u . on1y 15 minutes co1111ya 1. ~ c Lli.!.:!1-i:!·i!I 3 lk2Ba, cul-dH1c, 1--::------=--:-=f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Net ssooo per year Xchince rod · 3 ba priv yd, cnr S79S ocean side or bwy at r:O'!' Futoon lsland,
7 r:~u~.=.~/:::a-qt4;Jf4:t Bkr 7SM177 lll 2 1ACOHOO 63l·il5o, 2043 ·2049 7~71.87 Ml·9990 ShawsCove.$1250.A&t. mioutcatoS.C.Pluaor
po1t1trnent to see, call -------·~ -CHARMING SPANISH Wallace. 4Br Nwpt Riviera Cond~. 494·7551 0 C Airport Just east of ~1151 5llMISA"-DE p• .._ .... 2 ~~J:tce:,~at~~:w-lrn~ VILLAOHUMDO t.co..P,.,.,ty 200C ....... tennis/pool/jac. av11I M.wportlHdl l26t Ne~port Bl~d & so. or
,."" ""'" is very versatile on an ...................... , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~0 ·1S ·81. $8SO mo. ••··~··••••••••••••·~·· San Diego Frwy. Start· 3100SF,SBr +fam,pool I n Willo wc reek Section. $123,900. Good extra wide I« Orla 6 M"'KE ....... -11, Ho...Ftnhhtd 642·3397 Seav1e~~Br3Ba,ram1ly inc 11 s1000 a month. -: ~ HERITAGE
. REALTORS + spa, immac. Sl47.000 Northwood. Lovely 3 lerrru. bedrooms. now s. but A ~ V'l"T'I: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. 2 ba + loft condo, rm, dintng rm. ocean It 631·5439, 2'73 Orange assumable. Priced ot bdrm. 2 ba Extras in· loy Mcc..le. llr. could be changed back ._._ __ 1_.__. l I 06 brand new, high.1Y up. night. light views. Pool & Ave., Costa Mes.. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!fl S31S,ooo by owner 1 d d nvate spa 541-7129 1 3 Income Properties. --d d 1 f •• Sl~pr mo . 9'19~9789 c u e : P . lo 6. Features a arge East.side Costa Mesa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• era e • x ot view o ""no.IS. ...,., . Cll. New Lwtury Coodo. Eutaide Fixer Upper• 3 covettd and ralsed.patido lovely sunny patio. New 0 w n er wi 11 car r Y FUJ'fl 2BR. paUo, frplc, waterfalls, 2 car gar w. Lrg 2BR. l~BA. Garage
br, 1 ba, spa.10\AJ~ fin O..PoW 1026 It clanters -lime OCEAMFIONT kltchenamusttosee! PrlcedtoseU! gar, waterfront W/dock opener.$725.957·9212 Wat.erfront lease. 4 Br 4 opener, micro·wave,
1120.000. Agt.6'2-1523 ....................... m: i~~lr~~~vel~ta~:u IY OWNER Grand Canal. Wintt'r Eastside. 2BR. fenced :i~o~~d~k To'; !gP:.~: frplc, pool ' spa. $750 Collece Pk. fixer upper. 3 u2 BR BEACH HOUSE coverings . plantation New cust. bit 2 sty, 1 lfl S6SO mo. patio. Adults. No pets. S
500
mo. 645·40!5.
br , 2 ba, ram rm. Owner/agtwi.U carry at shutters.CaJltodaythls FrenchNormandy 3BR ~CC-CD 673-0S $4SO, lst, last + dep. 1 · WESTCLIFF-NB
Sll0,000.0WCS80.000 1st 14%.S2S,000dwn.Selling won't last long at It den home. Can be NEJ~ lalMHIP.-. 3107 646·1078 4Br4 Ba.clean&sharp, Beaut.1200sq.fl.2BR2
TD. 642·1523A · price Sl2S,SOO. Sl,242.84 Sl77,SOO. split. $895,000, OWC. 3711 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II 1'1!111.tflM JOC ....................... 2BR, $575. Fenced yrd. next to tennis & beach. Ba , fplc, dining rm,
per mo. Prine It int Seashore.6'1U678 ~!.!.!.tf-Tf 3 br. 21'• ba. winter. gar.613 W.19th.CM. SlSOOmo. Remax ofNpt refrig. Adlts, no pets. SUPEI !! 499·2986 Trade Luxury Newport 714 641 0763 $69S/mo. n5 Montero 646-114.S BoborDovle7Sl·l221 f695.6'0-7ll4
3Bdrm,FreedomHome homeon\liacreforln· SZ0,600DOWH! 2925College A\'l' l-879-S991,21J.335-4696 Back Bay view Nr 2 Br.lBa.enclsdpalio&
wtrrplc. Bea~fully up-Fo..toi11 Vtley 1014 come Uruts or? Equity MfWPOITIEACH CO!ita Mesa. CA ON THE BEACH: Winter Airport. 3 br. 2 ba, re· WESTCUFf garage. Adult.sonly. $SOO
graded. $ll4,000, with ...... ,................. $280,000 Act now ! Spacious4brlnprestlge Rental,7 Br.2Ba.Ap· dec.,gar .. bigyard,lge Luxurious four Mo.7Sl·~.5'8a7001.
terms.Superb. HELP. Desperate owner Broker Co·Op. Agent area. Anxious owner frade Luxury Newport pliances. ~-Mon!. Int patio. $750. 642.9542 bedroom, three bath F ... LeJ
•
RED CARPET
754-1202
must sell 4 Br. fam rm, 631·4516. says tr}' Lease/Option! home on 'h acre for ln· quire 126 E. v.:ea ron I br, 1 ba. nr Broadway & home. Beamed ceilings .,.,.._ .. r.w...i-111-IN
din rm. Great area. land contract or 1?~ Cal come Un.its or? Equity or call 1-213-398·3332 Newport Blvd, no pets. io living room Ind fami· ••••••••••••••••11•••••
$140.000Bkr.848-0709 THEaUFF 759·150lor~7373 $280,000. Act now ! Evt§.or1·2u.839-2261. 1400/mo. 1st ' last, ty room. Sttluded pool lc6oal"-d 1706
HwilMCJf• IHclt I 040 523,. ft.. lllW ..t.r. PLAH "X" Broker co.Op Agent Octanfronl. Lovely res avail. now. 640-8107 size ya rd. Space for boat ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------i ••••••••••••••••••••••• '+ 1,.AMPU,w.: "•'"~· 3 bdrm, din. rm .. liv. 631--4.516. area. 4 bdrm. 2 ba, fplc , Lrg exec 58R. 3BA .. Fam or trailer. $1850 month Cute small 2bdtm, lba.
...... f F/P 2111 l·-------• washer/ dryer. Winter rm. pool, gardener yearly basis. Agent winter rental HOO. OLD TO"" L-.___._ I 0,. rm.. am. nn.. · I SU90 mo OBO d -s ..... .. FAST MOYE
Owner packing and will
finance this 4 Bdrm Costa Mesa North home
This quiet cul de sac
home is looking for a family ! Will consider
14% loan for 7 years with
j ust $20,000 down!
2 years old, 3 8d 2 Ba .• ~ •••••• =:' ........ : ba. xtra large porcelat0 renta · Sl2SO mo. Agt Ju Y 631·7300. __ u• .......... . SIH 900 b th tub w/ceram1c tile walls 1 98 UNITS (213 > 476· 7738· 1714 1 979·5370, 540-7618 E Bluf condo 4 br 2 ~ ba,• ..::_._o.:..:...= __ ... ,-..... ---3-7_0_7 ..... · Charming 3 bdnn, 2 a ered · ""S ""'u ._ . 675-1771 +guest apt. No. end &noor.4cov patio v ·~ VIEWnewer4BR,2sty, 83SAm1gosWy#8 $9'35 ....................... . Emerald Terrace Walle areas.PrlceS230,000.S3 r-c.._. 1076 C 14-7fl'lt1n> Steps to Bay! Lovely 3 ~mo. 213-S41-4460,S4H813 WWwl .....
I down , assume $40,000 1st :191 bdrm home. 2 ba. fpc, A t. 646-4:11() BAYSHOR"""'. 4BR.3BA 2 bdrm, l ... _ u "" to beach. Assume oan. trust de"" at 7"'·"'. Xlnt ••••••••. ••••••••••••••• y Lo D washer/dryer Winter J:"1 .,. ..,..,., he r. ""' .. ,., G If •ry w own . N1'ce clean 2 Br. l Ba .. Home. Across from 2Bdrm lu..ba H UI Owner will !Ip mance. land lease S8S3.00 per ShorechHs. 4BR. o "' rental. S790 mo icon· .,.. ..,..,.,
$295,000. Peg Allen. Rltr, year. Can't change until Course, .Beach Club, Dec 0~ ... Ccnll! sider yr l'Olllld Sl150) New carpet. paint. Swim Beach. $14.50 mo. 2 Bdrm Qceanft $575
494·7578. year 2003 143 int only possession. Owner/Agt 12131 H 6.7738, (714) drapes. Enclsd garage, 213-~2111,213-441·3252 3Bdrm2ba 1825
OCEANFRONT·New 2nd trust deed due willftnance'98-S886 SUPS 87S.393S ~~t.y~~u~o+~ LUXUIYIAYROHT '4Bdrmoceanft $1200
Modular Type Homes, 198&-87. Call owner for Tu Wrih-Off ..... leadl l 141 security 2546 Orange 3 Br. 2 Ba. with boat slip. leased land. 3 pvt bcbs. appt. daily after 11 am OtlMt' IHI Est.ft Fent hctow Possible ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. A ... S48-277S. Avail. Oct. lst. Many
Fussy -Move f -as t li:lrdili ..... (illiil buyers. Call 540-11.St
· -! -HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
24 hr serority, fishing (714) 346-58&0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lkn. & Prfllcipah Whitewater vu Emerald amenities S3SOO Mo. •... HO pier from $34,SOO. 10% !11!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 Mobae H-. w._ Bay 2 Br 2 Ba +Loft· 3 Br . 2 Ba . Near Broker67$-4912.
BURR WHITE
REALTOR. INC .
67~4630 ,..., down. 4~16 SlO.OOO REDUCTION! For Solt 1100 · vt be h Is Paularino School Large b--d -k TON tennts·P ac. poo . back yard. 2 car garage. Beacon Bay, 3 r, oc • HUNTING Sale or lease option new Harbor View home. ••••••••••0 ••••••••••• 11..L ~ iu" A •""'1177 · I $1700 OC EANFRONT.New ""' .....,mo. '"""" · $700 Mo. Sierra Mgmt. tennas , 2yr ease. . FIHDOM HOUSE 2 Bdrm 2 bath mobile ~ans~oan~~i~~i::~~~ ~rgf~:i~: d~~o~a1t: Modular Type Homes. 714/76 7292 OCEANFRSONr l BR, rt Co. 641-1324.. refs reg. 67s.&617 Corou ----.. --W.----37_22_
3Br.1Ba.largeyard home. Adults. Owner TDs or ' Call Paul ed shows like model. leased land,3pvtbchs. point. p ectacu ar 2Br 1Ba.enclsdgarage. EASTILUFf •••••••••••••••••••••••
18$.000. · · · · · · · · .6'1·0763 will help finance. Only 499·5648. High assumable :.> yr 24 hr security, flsh.ing !!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!11!1111!!!!!!1!!!11!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I views, 1.:! !.Scdlts S990 crpts, drapes. nice yard 4 bdrm, 2~ be, family Lg studio apt, mat~re T bd 141.SOO. CaJI MS-9161 •-"'--Lock bo pier from $34,900 lO'ir C.M. TRIPLEX, good r mo . ......-.... w NO PETS. ••75 Mo room, fi-pla~ Clean adults. oo .-., S400 me By Owner. wo 2 rm BUY •i, INrEREST in ..,an 12.s....,,. x. ... .... ~.... ...--
houses on I lot. SlJ0,000. 2 B r . t Ba u n 1 t 1860 Port Wheeler. down. 499·:1116 area, a.ssum. loan. OWC. M.wport IHclt l I H 548-6680 executive home Avail Ulil 673-016'or673-S454
Assumable l~ 1st T.D. w /WH ITEWATE R S23S.OOO. Owner I Agt IEACH/AffotdaWe pnced right. Prin. only ....................... 1 Br duplex, Eis1de. sun· now. Sl,SSOmo Cot .. M... 1724
OWC carry 2nd. 20th It VIEW. Sl3,000cash. xlnt 9SS·224Sor780-9586 148,SOO with low low Bkr,979·4383 BA YCREST 5 bdrm ny pvt yrd, sm pel ok. 642·5161.640-8107 ...................... .
onb :640-7464. can rent out. Brian S2,000permo.SBR3Ba, ram rm. Min. age 18yrs. T charming 4 bdrm, 2 548·7MS,MS-7:.ll. Quiet end unit townhse Fum.
1
br. apt. S34S &
Pomona . Call wkdays ft0ancing. Uve here. or s10.ooo Total Cash Own. down. 2 yr, 2 Br. 2ba, J '-'UAIL ~~8o~''ir:1010gflt'~ S37S/mo. Grdnr incl rAlk SETTING SUS CASITAS
SI 0,000 DOWM!! J97ohnslS6oloA~7!)51 or eves gracioTus 21Jstyha. Bdack Bay sml pets OK. AcJranltoss pi _.CE bath, newly redecorated OCT. 1. Very lge attrac· oo greenbelt Master up. Encl gar. Adults, no Sharp 3BR borne. As· Space galore ... Spacious 4 · JI\· area. a 5 e, over· from bch. Mary ~ Sl800 mo. Yearly. Bill live 3-4 br, 2 ba. North Bdrm + 2 more bdrms. pets. 2110 Newport Bl.
aume $116,IMXI first. OWC 4 Bdrm. or beach AH!'!~ oi!ende :ot .s:r~sosor Rltr. 631·11»4 NOP'BTJES"' Grundy,6™i161. C.M. . 641-:1137 2"'2 ba, pvt palJo No S48-4968btwn8'5PM.
Remainder. Sll8,000 Owner will help you uuV'I TERM~ TB.MS A.LIO 4BR . 2BA. S650 mo. Clean pets. S67S. Call 644-9514 S37S/mo Deluxe Mobile
851-7181 Brtr. buy! Asking Sl78,SOO. Sparkling 3 Bdrm home 63
1-7
2lSevs EXCITING* .,,. YILLA I A It neat. Pet.s/ch1ldren or Answer Ad 11272, Home. Mature adults, no
5% dwn or trade. View Bkr.848-0709 0 n beaut If u 11 y * ~cJ~t:x~~';:i!; w~!1; ~::~~o~~~:~"!~~ QK AvailNovl.6312246 642-430024hrs _ pets. Quiet. secure. 199t
condo. 3bdrm, 2.,.,ba DREAM HOME. 4 Br landscaptd comer lot. BAYFIOlfT Ea .... S. IS% dwn. Seller will den. Fabulous ocean Older 2bdrm house on \2 Harbor View Homes: Newport Blvd.646-8373.
Prine. Only . Owner Culdesac pnvary.Our Soothing spa. wood OWNER BUILDER With o r without carry 2ndTDatl~int , view. Maid ser vice. acre lot. 1541 Mesa Dr Waterfall.~azebo, Ko• 1 __ .___._
3741 (213) 592-4.184. best buy $129,900. Bkr decking and covered G s· (213)861·2510. Pond. wooden Cool· ....,_... ._
- -patio. Lowest priced in furniture, 2064 reen-1st TD at U "'1%. S2000 per month. ix . -bridge, lovely exec 4BR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tnbme. bi·level, Cpc, 3 _,848'-=-·~07'-"09=-------thearea.S249,SOO Must sell beautiful 4 brier Home in Laguna Quail PlaceProperties months lease. 631·7300 Charming 2 Br I ba. 3,~BA homewtseparate Fu"!luxst~.spa.TV,
BR,3 bapriv yd,micro. lnlH 1044 0 SEN Bdrm4bathhomewilh HlllsnicestSstarpark. 752-1920 R alt.or. frpl c. garage, rear guest apt.
11400
mo maid service, phones. upgrade OWC lO"'r dn ........................ D 0 N • boat dock. Asking price Gre .. .tPn !!!!!11!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11' Fantas tic Townhouse. house. SSSO /mo lse
759
_
0279
Jl2Swk.'9&-2227
159 000. 851·9990 NEAT! R~RS Sl.llS.000. Try $250,000 Beauti/ul 1DxS3 Lancer E/SIDE4 UNITS ocean view, frplc. ever· Backs ur to golf course. twwport.... 17'9
•GOVERNMENr 15 8 pin. Spotless 3 Br 2 ---~=---~--1 down. Submit orrers. Home . 2Br. 2Ba. This is Owner will trade SlSOK ytbing furnished. S89S Water ron t Hom es ILUFFS. Y1EW •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOANS• Ba home w/pvt gated WATaWATB Dan Bibb. lheBestBuyintown equ1tyfornot.esorhouse Mo.760-9117 63J.1400. On Back Bay, 2 Br. 2~ Oceanfront. Neat 2BR. Possible5%dwn,l2·l4~ patio entry. Near new EYEIYWHB.E 67S·2ll1&640-766S HwHarlwldt ID good area. S600/mo. 1706 W OCEANFRONT Fo.tctiltYtley 3234 Ba. Den. Condo. 2 car S575 Mo Winter Adult.
int rate.:.> yr Ins. free carpets & microwave Spectacular views, IOGEISIEALTY 12x60 witli SltSO ex· net income Deluxe 5 Br. 2.,.., Ba ........................ garage, rrplc. 11300/Mo. ooeets.2l3-795-:.ll8
info. Close to schools & shop. sprawling 4 bdrm, 3 panded area. 2Br. 2Ba. Ref's. 11200 Mo. Avail. HOME FOR RENT 548-0767. OCEANFRONT
2
&
4
Br. WORLDRliL ping. OnlySl.29,000. Call baths. 2 Crplcs. WET laylitoNtbvC>wwtr 12x20muterbdrm. S86,650DUPLEX thru 6·1S.82. 675·9932. '4 Bdrm. POOL. S9SO. llODEGl&VIEW Avail. Wint.er. Weekly/
ESTAll fordetails. BAR , beamed ceiling, Lrg •BR. 46A home. CLASSIC Investor's dream. Live 213/446-6684 _ Fenced yard & garage Seawind. 3br. 2ba. very Monthly .673-7873.
5'9 777 ~~~~ ~~e~~u~~ch~~: Steps away rrom pvt MOii.i HOME in0i":a~ 1~~~aa~~~e:~ Westclirr 3 bdrm, den, 3 ~~~. pe~t ~~~~me pvt. Xlnt cood. Nope~. Steps to Ocean. tenrus. NOTHIMf'DOWN pansive patio & pool beaches.Ownerwillu· SALES • ntaAn1.Sl6Kdn. ba , nr schls. pk , Gdnr incl Sl.500 Avail jog, bi.kt 2 BR, 2 BA. .. area wlrock rimmed stsl in financing or will 2706 Harbor,Ste:?a;.A water/gardner pd S97S H.ttilCJf-IHclt 3240 Io ' 2 o ca 11 e HS · Wntr$5§0. 673-3S86
BY OWNER con.sider trades. Shown 5~5tl7 R H INVESTMENTS mo avail thru Apr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 857-0377 Spacious 4Br. JBa. nr ~! rJ water f a 11 · by appt only. Pnn only. !!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11' 752.2197 646-8635 HOME FOR RENT .,,~ .....-..:1t 2 bdrm, 2 ba, rireplwace.kl bch. Take over existing --------....,,,, · $530,000.Princonly.Ron ~ 4 Bdrm. $700. Fenced -'"-""""""' car gar.ooocean. ee · rinancing payable at ·-------•I MlSSlONREALTY JacksonSSS.llOO A real hodme..BfnnR·t2~ee;: 114)Cpeo.do yard It garage. Kids It HA .. OIVlfW LY/Monthly.'78-9172
123·1195,000. 675-7104. 4!N-(7l31 ..::..:="""-'o=..;=-'---fenced Y · 2 ' a LAIGl4 PLEX 2 Bdrm and den, end un· peta welcome. 54.5·2000. 4 Br. 2"" Ba. Family rm, PACIFIC SUNSET PARK HERE L-CNJll'e---=..,..;;..;..o.......,, __ I 0-5-2 IACI IA Y spa In 8 x 1B enc porch. Excel rental area. Costa It, attached dble gar. Agent, oo ree. Din rm, 2300 sq. tl No V1 EW
NO DOWH Choose the ~eel loca· •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• $113.000 Adlts at sml pets CM Mesa. All 2 Br • .,.., ba. Tastefully dee. SHOO mo 4 BR, 2 mi to beach, $650 pets. $1700 Mo. Drive by lS steps to sand. Lg 2
48RMesaVerdeHome. liononparlikegreen~ PEIFECTSTARTB Spacious Uving room 645-64.56 owe paper with tomo.644-<XW per mo.+ S8SO dep. firstl.806PortAbb1ecall bdrm w/carport, bal,
Owner will do shared in lrvine.3Br,2Ba,en or m-vestment'.! Sharp With stone fireplace, 4 ----... ---minimum dn. Call Avail,Oct.lO.OU/\""a 752-6499. !dry fac ut.il Inc S6SS ·t g ram unit oo cul·de·sac. bdrms huge a,,.. . ....,......., ~ 7 e~u1 y pro Fi11ancing can be as· condoingrowingarea.2 generous . . ~ 645·1103Brolter Spec t ac ular view 2sty,3br.2bacondo,nr 4br . 4ba ho m e in -==-l·=...94:..:1..,__ ____ _ ;ri~~~~:.i~ ~~ sum., plus owner will as· BR 2balhs ·Best of all ls ~~i;:1~ed ~~teCea~~~:~ MAKEOffll Oceanfront 3 br, 2 ba. 2 s b 0 PP in g c en 1 er . Bayshores. Avail 1st l8r 1 blk to bay & bch.
ukforEd.. stst.Readytomoveinat prlceofSl04,000 brick fireplace. Sparkl· Bank repo. S star pet COIOHA.CA. story. Avail. now. SSSO /mo. No pets. weekinJan.Sl800mo.l $400 mo. yrly. Ocean·
-="-="--"'='------i S1S6,000. L.,_. V-....1.l. ing pool and spa. Local· park, 2Br, lg lot. Asking 21 units on golf course, Winter 1900 or yearly 7S2·2197. yr lease. Ron Jack.son front l Br. SSOO mo.
NEWNICE 497·17'1 ed on a quiet cul de sac. S22,000 but lender says break even, pool. Many lease S1200. No pets. Agt, 556-1800 winter. JONES RLTY
2 houses . 1 lot. XJnt Assumable loans! Take bring offers!!! (Sl018l. uni ts have fireplaces. S48·SS27. NEAllEACH WESTCLIFF 3 bedroom, _,67:..:.:3=-·=621=--0 ____ _
cond. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Ready M.wportltodl I06' advantaoenow! 645-0303 PLUSHllAUTY Assumable financing, 3 bdrm. 2 ba. newly de· l story with pool, family Oceanfront 1 Br winter lo move in with all new ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Silver Crest quality. sales price 1169,000. At corated, lots of tile. S6SO. room, 2 fireplaces. din· rental, terrific vu. up.
appliances. 1 Br. 1 Ba. --------DOVB SHOIES 2U6', s star prestigious J. Jansen (714l$J6.9461 HMHs Uwfwalllllltd 692 tng room. 3 patJos, etc. stairs,673-&3
rented. Reduced From Pool. JacuuJ overlook Westminster Park. or (213)821-'7'!M9 ....................... •WALKTOBEACH• etc.SlSOOMo.646-4477. OCEANFRONTAPT
$179,SOO to Sllll,SOO. 395 * *. 2 BA bay. Galaxy Dr. Formal Many luxurious xtras One or Newport Beach's ,, .. ,... 3202 Exec 3~~ 2ba, ram rm, Winter rental, l br, $400
Flower, best Eastside BIOAl*OOR din. rm .• 2 rrplcs (KW67'11·72). f inest oceanfront ....................... frplc.dmmgnn.963·Sl91 llGC&uvA:...r mo, ulils incl. No pets. Costa Mesa location. 1685 ooo fee 642 2510 OWOJ-AHAMCIHG Ch · Qui c J "-"""'"'" .... Need S40.000 cash down. · · · · -1....-.-.-"SR duplexes. totally un· RENTALS armmg et u ·Ute: Luxurious Three 548·1930,673-7"'"
Owner/Broker673-6372. Enjoy Woodbridge's 646-4848. Small but nice, 18r obstructed panoramic YEARLY·WEEKLY· Sac. 3BR hse. 1"'4 BA. bedrooms. Two baths. 1 br. lovely furn, pool,
super amenities and the ILUFFS Mobile Home. SlS,900. view. 2 It 30wnBr units in w I NT ER . 2. 3. 4. Gardden
1
1ci
7
'tch
0
. Av11l
1
lmj Richly decorated. Muted spa, gym, sec. guard. MtwTo~ "Good Life" in this up· OPEHHOUSE Sgt story Linda plan, Flexible terms, friendly primecond. er'sun· BDRMS, NEWPORT me . s mo. nc tones. 3000 square feet. $750.0wn/agt,831·6666
2 Br 2 Ba, luxlll)' 2-sty, graded patio home at DAJLY 19' with 3 Br 2 Ba. This end park. (RGS464). It bas trelc. beamed BEACH It BALBOA. gardener. 842·183S lst Overlooks UXh tee or
great finaocinc. l S'k end of cul-de-sac. Low Brand new condos in unit bas open beam ceil· MULHEARN wooden cetlinp, lg out· J.R. Property Manaaers last + dep. 842·183S No coif cou.l"le. $3500 month llG CAHYOH
dwn. $128,IMXI. S44>-3666 interest assumable loan. Costa Mesa located at ings •a private location RE.ALTOIS dool r decks.2~uomwabcle 67~173 pets Yearly lease. #7 Rue Pbdartia2llL f~Lals~~.__2
Sl&,OOO 2277 Pacific Ave. Great with a Ire covered patio Mob• ...... DIY, oan at 1 -"'· .. a..o.1.-.. l206 .._ti!HJjt.... Grand Valee. Open Sun· rm, -... c "'"un-Whelan iJ financing, great buf! I BBQ All new in ( 141527 5900 S750,000. Agt. 759·0704, Hari*r 3242 day ls To see call do. Sec gate, pool, spa \\bod bridge Come ' see. Redhill ~:: + a si>a off the lrg 1 • 7 . . (:h';r;;;;·;:1·b;·~:s"; ••••••••11•••••••••••0 631·7l00, Realtor. tennis. · 7!1·15' lteal Estate R I Realt.y,673-7300. mstr suite. Only $37,000 Daaa Point Triplex, with front ya rd oo good We at h er I y Ba y CEANFRONT·Balboa
· el llJ ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!l!!!!m!!!!!!!!!!!!!I dwn to usu me long ~S,000. On Payment Island location. S750 mo. wate.rfront condo. 2 Br. 2 Br 1 ba. Hardwood, nn. dlx winter 3Br, 2S.. S8SO 38 'IS FIXED 551 ·3000 In._· 1044 term financi ng (no MAllMAPAU .00083. ~~l~:f:R Xlnt lease oppty. Call 36' boat slip. Avail. Im· open beam. rrplc _ mo. lBr. moll mo, No
492tBarnntt Pb y,lrYlllf -balloons). Total price Sll0,000 . LYn67S-8283or§43:2949. med. SlOSO. 846·46SS. S79S /mo. 631·5476, eet.s,l'dlt.s,673-8640 llbard ~find.Check on --------•••••••11111• .. •••••••• $219,500. CaU Ownr /Agt Lovely nearly new nice LehforS. 2100 .._,. ...... 3107 _,146-:.=-445=7.:...-_____ 4~eves
thia 4 BR. t~ ba, Seller ••••••Iii••••• lot info or t.o see 553-1006 mobile home In coovt· .............................................. nM 1244 Condo/Boat aUp. 18• 3 Br. A.f.a tw•
is cooperative. cau now wknda • art 6PM or 0 I e n t N e w p o ~ t • acres of land Newport 2 br, uUls pd, S67S/mo. 113 ....................... 2"' Ba. Nu crpt, paint. U.fw • t id
752-6t9t MACNAB 556:17129-Swkctrs. Walerlroot community Beacb. OK for Condos. E. Balboa Blvd. 3 Br, family rm. dbl Refs. 11250Mo.67S.'135 ...................... .. g M9t Hh. a n _, wil~ b:J view. FulJy Office or Medical Bide. [13-5350 aarage. central air, pvt 1706 W OCEANFRONT ....... 1106 Plan IV Realty
.,;o....,
DOUHOUSI La.r•• eo by too' lot with s IN!drooma 2 ba home.
Larae fuced yard.
Sl.IO.OIO. •
WATERFRONT
HOMES
AEALESTATE 631-1-400
IHAIPIAST'lel , .....
OML Y Sll!MtDOWM
Oner wtll finance to , .. 11nec1 buf et. Wtll
totaled, IDOd ~ • ............
ample,..-. lelow U ... .,....
~..., .... n11 ..
.:.-.~ .U tatalina Dr. 2BR 1 (W"Dllb 2 Bdrm 2 ba. 6'l·07e3 C.... dll W. 1112 yd , comm. pool ' spa. Oeluu s Br. 2"'-Ba. ~··••••••11 .. 11•0 ••••• n Y •,,.,;; ba, open ~Ama J.ardwd All acceuoriel to move $700 mo. Avail. lmmed. Refs. *1210 Mo. Avail. :.mall I bdrm over ear REALTY Ora. Planafor ~story right In • lncludktC dl.s· 5.5ACllS ieR':··~itc::e-;;;;•c;,t~ Suzee Miller or Fred lhr u 8~15-82. 175-9932. apt. '400,P« mo+ util, •-CP .. --addition. '22$,000 wilb hes. ~ Sweeping, unoblttucted laae" Canyon view, Glbeon,rltrs&NIO 213/44&<84. Maturtsinileadultonly
$50,000 do'4m.Gl·S.76or WATE.RFRONT view of Capistrano atove,nopeta,adJLl,S850 S Br.2~8a.2at.oryCon. ref Eve=
OUTSTANDING NORTHWOOD
FAMILY NOMI Beautiful -4 BR, 2~
bath Spanish ·tile roofed
Meadow Home. Family room,
ear thton e decor & s u per
landscaping. Owner will assist
w/lin an~ing . $198,000. Young
Park 551-8700 (055)
llAU1VUI. ll&n'WOOO Assume
hieh balance loan on thb lovely
Woodbridge TWNHM. SpatiOUI
'?BR + Den, 21,\ BA, 2-Car 1ara.1e.
wet bar, private beaC!h 11001
w/pool & lake prlvtle(es. 1192,500
Myrna Boom ~1-8700. eta>
'94-G.18$en1. HOMES llK. ValJey Located llD008 blclcrdnr.m.14'4 do.• sier mo. Proper. 1---=-=-='----
IA.Sla.Wf AEAl.E!f~T£ ~r:~~~e f~o!':! SPACIOUS 58r. 38a, ty Houae. 8'2·3850 ' ,, I •• 1107
3 bdrm, f~, Cal.a.llna 631-1""""" • y ht H bo. formal dlnnn. fam rm 6'2·1010. Occ and U hi.I Point ac ar r. •I•~ bar srdftr lncl. •·s=P=A=c=1o=u-S_5_B_R_n _· Bach. S.S. 1 Bf. 1 Ba.
ao SI.II La, Secludtdyetconvulent. A ti · SJ.200 mo WDllGllAUTY ecutive home. Beal Bay Side.""'°· Adults. view. Opeo 1·5. AcrMttfwS. 120G SHS,000. Altraclive •• now. • 3+ lam rm, •ormal d'·. Harbor v•-HL"-........... no pets. Savaae WUde t Arbutus NB $275,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •·rm· Alt.1804311. ,, u• ,.... .ws ""'... Co ...
AA about """ flnanc. 20 .a.c PllMI .., a 2 ,_,,, condo. Cloet to Uon l La .... 1rounc11. On· · •• · 1ft«. A&t. 557-4579 or A • .
8:!>1.21)~.~~ = lak~ flab, 1lrim, bolt, ty si•i~! Call bkr. Yb~~~'l_ L~· 11 deck, 2 ~1011 to11.t•t1t ••cl • mo. 1.uu Option . ;r:s Sorry no 11enl.a. B:;'wM:.:51e«1.a
Monet Venailles ~~~!M!.!tr~r.:.•~, 1p.7211 /mo. Loll Mllttrast. c.._. J27' c SID.HO oceaa aDd mowlalu. w 1e Harllor View Hiiis 1-G::.:.l·......,,__ ___ :-
Bt au t lfu I Condo Mah ofr . 145·1103 Home. Private, pool, 2 br Deernetd condo, 3bdrm. 2ba , walk to ,..., ....
featu.res dlllftlUuJ din· A.ant. ·~il view. 1 year leaae rtfri8. w .. btt. dryer, Ocu afroet, I Wra ,
101 area, llallan tile .___, ., av I. •LllO Mo. Ev•. bdnn • din. nn fllnl. net unit, II did. lltlna
floortts1 In ""1y, mir· -'''c UH · 7aa1Sl0.,. '40-5050. Atail. Od. 10, .-no. lor I. IM .. , ftui, rorffbar iD IMn1room .................... ,,. A OlvL~OftOf ' A@{9rCbuc!tt Rit'ba.nl 85'1..aG, Jolln i-<="'-------llail r
mirrored ward rob~ Por HI!: PrlM. Onty. · ~tarbor lnv_!MIJ'tftl Co., caa. HA to decree m.tuO 1-..;..-'!~~.m~!l-.
doors. Lar111t OH WOCD•. , ...... bol&i-.... PvUkL$1.llO ·-··ll b e d room mod el. tut. Out1ta ndl11 • · -·-•• _.. vttw ud coot Newport ltac• loc. ~ lbr... Im ...._ ..... ,_,ot. Im....,_ to: Ad C.-.......... alr,1'"9 !!
fml Calm.•'°' ... DaQr_PUat, P.O. <llllrtlbatWllt• H t ao•et•ta1 you tllr,JINI iii:
,I :I U., n.itA-._ P<Jl ....... toWkl l nlltoteltTa..... ar.a. ·u· r-...... lo _. ..... , ~l·b•lb •1 ~~~~~~!:~~~~!!~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~1:.:!!•~ltl~ll~R~l~l~la~~!l"I!._. l lBI ..,M,..., ~-••-[\~
J
Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOT/Mondi)', October S. 1931
.,_ , .... u.tw.. .,_, ... ts~ Ape l:w•h u.twa. .,_...u ~~llled3900 ~~.~!!~ .. !?~~! ?.!!'~.~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~.~~~ ...... ~!!.0 ~.~~.~ ••••• !!~! ~!':'.~.~ .. !~~! ~~-~.~~ .. !~~ ....................... ....................... ....................... or .... www 6 7 W UU NB W t S250 Up. Hunt. Bch. Rent, 1125 sq.ft. UOO mo. MUISI
C......delM.. 1122 CosteMtM 3124 H•llMJl•leacli 3140 ·s···e···~··w·····,··a:,:··o·· F~r~NiiB;:ri ~~,/flnan:f!f in°11t.0 10oo:j_ Carpet, drapes, air M.wportc.t.rDr. 1355 Logan, #1 CM desires house or apt. ....................... ....................... ........................ A f"'lll k d alt &·JO lst. floor. Agent541·5032. 17301Beach.642.-2834. Gorgeou exec. suite. 675·5116 Clean, quiet, reliable
Walk to bch Qu.iet3 Hr 21r.lleA.t •~••! VIL• •GE Mw nor_ .. ~ ·2i L Lea.seloraJIJ.lnrludes Storw 4550 Cathy67$-l5l6 2ba, dplx.' gar, $900. Newly deeor C:aa pd, Clean 2 'bdrm. l~ ba. I.A non -suuu. +. rg HEWPOIT 17THSTIHT phones, rtteptJon, con-••••~••••••••••••••• Child OK, no pets. Drive encl car., pool, dshwr. I Huntington Landmark New 1&2 ~ luxury 3BR. Cd!". No Flakes. PENMSULA COSTA MESA ferenre nns. ropM?r + Ga g I tor 12'W X .__. ~1
by only. 7U Heliotrope. Adults. 642.-5C173. condo. Stack.washer and adult apts ID 14 plaN I ~ + util. 6"-4TI3 . Spacious executive of· 2 or 3 room o(ficesuites much more. S460 per mo 35f~ eN 5 . ~~ p o r •1-T...--Ava1l l0/3. 972-!M06 dryer. 2 pallos, wetbar. Bdrm fromS465. 2 bdrm Single Mom ID Irvine fices acl'Qll.S from City A/C pl nt ol rk Ut I 631·2ll2 r 'me~ ost . FIMK• 3 Ir Toct1*omt bit in gas dble oven and from $535, Townhouse wants rmrnte S200 mon-Hall All services availa· incl.' Av~il~ no: c:ll 1 ice.~· . uuu .. uuuu•Hu•• Lge 3 br, 2 ba, gar, new Newly decor. gas pd.. range. 2 car gar. S600 from $610 + pools, ten· thly, childOK.5&-9224 ble •optional'. From 225 Realonomics 675-6700 a..tals WClllhd 4600 .......
rrpt. So. ol Hwy. S775. encl ear .. pool, dswhr. per mo. I.st and last + nis. waterla!ls. poods! Rental needed. Resp sq .it. up at reasonable _,. f 0 ••••••0 •............ 0,,os lmsltr 5fOS
675-81126, 67$-1225 Adults. 642·5C173. SJOO sec deposit. Call Gu for rooking & heat· male 26 seeks 2 br +2 ba rentals No lease re· Costa Mesa, ~ sq t Lease or lease option ..................... ..
2 BR l Ba, ear, patio East.side 1 BR. uUI pd, (714 ) 75H381 Ask for i~g paid. F~om San w/same inCDM qwred, ~all 67J..3002 suite. Sl75/mo. Utils in· wanted. Executive fami· LOSING LEASE, quit·
w/earden, S'750 mo. guiet location. No pets. Mr. Bingham Diego Frwy drive North (213) g.1718 MEWPOIT CIEUTR8 cld · 779 W. 19th. St.
4450
ly. xlnt credit, seeks Ung business, aellinc out 673-6522 Mon·Fri,9.S $325 C U 540-1158 on Beach to McFadden --m•._ 771-3350. 1Msiitfl1 R...tal 5-6bdrm home w/pool & ALL supplies and fil· mo. a Lagme lead! 1141 h w M F dden LAGUNA Beach. Mellow, Prestigious, full service •••••••••••n•••••••••• spa. Following areas: lures inclUdine: 2 BR • 2 BA · Pa Ii 0 ask for Dave M. •••••••••••0 ••••••••.•• ~o ense :~i~ ~ilTa ge straight, llOf)·smoker for EX EC offices. lnclds BA YFRON'.f OFFICE Store for lease. 750 sq. fl, Big Canyon, Irvine Ter· Display rues, waiting w/earden,S700mo. Lower 2 ~r. laundry, Lux. l b~._acl"06S main (714)893-5198 . 3 br, 3 ba house. lift rcpt, sec, xerox, under· ~feet,jarutorial,park· primeloc.C.M.S275mo. race, Shore CliUs, room chairs. Beauty
673-6522Moo·Fri. 9·5 D/W, wllc ID closet $400 beach, hi-nse sec. bldg. · blocks from Victoria ground pk'g, telex & an· mg. etc. 700-9440. 646-4041 days only H 1 rb0 r Ridge , & Salon hairdryers and
Cotta Mtse 1124 mo. 642·3912 Ls e · Harr Y Ka Ye Beach. Ocean view. S233 tique decor. ronr rm. Airport·& offices + lg C~ Spyglau. Send inquines hydraulic chairs, mir-••••••••••u• .. •••••••• 1 room bacbelor apt 494-7754 •~ 4000 mo. utils incl. Call: 6"-7189. divid~ rm. 551' sq ft ID· Rewtals 4475 to: Ad 11705, Daily Pilot, rors. shelves and plants.
MEWLYDICOI. 1225Mo. .Wwport-... 3169 :: .. • .. ~::;M~~· Gre&.494-4267 HEWPOITIEACH cl. maint + uul641-80'10, ....................... P.O 801 U60. Costa Also, malte-19>.abampoo
l Br. cu pd, encl gar .................. ~ .... ~un:o~acific Coast BAL B 0 A ISL AND Full service exec. of· 24·hrs PR I M E ARE A o f Mesa, 92626-0560. and hair products. d/wasber, pool. Adults 3 Br. 11.'1Ba.2 car garage Oceanfront for Winter BAY FR 0 NT Sh r fices trom S397 "On Share 2 ore swte in pre-NEWPORT BEACH 330 CallS31-97S4or
&42·5073. Condo. Im med. or· Rentals. Furnished le Hwy, L~a Bea~. beauUful 3 Br 2 Ba apt CaU" exec olfi~ from stigious airport area 375 to 470 sq tt Swtable for The fastest draw in the afler6,898-QI08 S~clous 2 Jlr. 1 Ba . cupancy $575. So. <;. unfurn. Broker. 675--(912. ~:!\)~b~e. ~~ ~~te~ with M/~ straight. $6C!OI $105. lncldS Sttntarial. sq ft. For det<uls caU ofhre or commercial West. .a Daily Pilot
d f I -.. Plau area. Call Rosie NO FEE! Apt. " Condo ra•~. •<>•<-vu IJ!O or will consider 2 m-phone ans., word pro-SSl-<6226. Call 675·8811 Clusif1ed Ad. 642·5678. W!lll Ad Help? 642-5678 u.n ry ac., poo · -5. 84.8-2262 rentals. Villa Rentals. ...,. ............... dividuals at S3'75 pr mo ressing, Telex, Qwip.
548-!1556 • l Br. Duplex. S375incld 675~Broller Balboa Inn. $90 & up each: non-smokers pre-TifEHEADQUARTERS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PllVACY & OUIET weekly. Kilchennette. !erred. lat, la.st & sec., COMPANIE.5
Like new Ur 2 flr. Apts. utils. No~9'9. PAii llWPOIT ocean froot.675-8740 refs. Brian67:H3118 7141~l-o68l • •
w/gar or carport. Up or Eastside . urge 2 Br.. COUMTIYCLUI XLN'T pvt ba & ent. nr Resp M over40tosbr_hse COSTAMlSA :· 8-D~D!I ~3~1n~tK• ~~l~ar~IAL ••• down, balcony or patio, natural wood ceilings &i UY1Mfi Hoag, no smolt/kilchen w/F /teen/pets 1275 met
pool, spa, bbq, laundry, b · t 2 ed $175. 645-1035 ulil. Refs. C.M. Avail F~f'l!lshed, $175 to $250, lush shaded landBcap-ca ine s. cover Bachelors, 1&2 bedroom Lovely large room Ca· 10·15. 642-2S33aft4pm. util. mcld. CaU00-9161 . • • .,,. •· M t e partrine space, 2 rov-apts 'townhouses. K. _......_ . . ....,,. -mg . ....,., ""up. a ur ered balconies, utilities From $5»SlOOO 644-1.900 ble .. lkucu J?MV. N'-I Roommate wanted, non· 17TH STllET
adults, NO PETS. Mesa paid. S600 Mo. PotenUal --Mo. inclcb utils Dana smoker. 2 br apt. $1901 COSTA MESA e Its easy to place your 8-0ay Week Class1f1ed by mail. and 1t e
Pines. 2650 Barta. rent redurtioo for li&ht 1 BR Versailles. Pen Pt.661·921!9. +""utlls.H.B.nrocean. 4.500sq. ft.ofmdividual e costs 1ust $8-thats only a dollar a day! To Qualify for this e ~2447. manager duties Pis call lhouse, S540per month Condo needs prof person Eves, 960-8179Sandra. offices. & reception, coo-f
LUXURY DUPLEX 551-1660. 644 -5369, 548·0425, tooccupylrgunfumnn Prof. female wants same ference rm. reasonably • special 0 fer, YOU must be a non-commercial user offering •
2 Br. 2.,., Ba. dble gar. 2BR , zBA. Lrg kitr h 751 ·9110· 645 '6242 $300 mo. Util pd Cati to shr 2bdnn. 2ba apt. priced call. • merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the price must •
l650 sq tt. with every Laundry fac. 1495 Owner/Aaent Bobby at 730-6478 or AU rec facil. 28-35. In Realonornics 675-6700 • be 1n your ad. The cost stays the same whether your ad • xtra , huge rear yard 63l-~ 2 Br 2 Ba .,., blk to bch. 551·9051 C.M. nr o c.c. Ref's
with RV gate. Adults. TREDfOUSE Yrly, gar, adlts, no pets Furn e cept bed Sl50 req Wkdys: 549-4834, M.I . OfftCES needs eight days selling time or JUSt one
f&S, 673-6.136, 642-96'6. lBR. over det car. $600 t util. 61$-1706 aft 4 lsl it la:t + S50 see. dep: ~. ~ p_remilum olfires avai~. • • 2 Br. l Ba. Pool, garage. 274 E19th. ~ 1 BR PENTHOUSE APT Incl. util, kitrh priv. F' 30 Prof. Non-smkT. nme oc .• new car~' e Use one word in eac h box. About 4 words make one • No pets. S465 Mo. 1395 A S42-9llll0/640-8900 VERSAILLES . N r Non-smkr, fem, no pets Seeks shar'd bsng. Bch wood floors, sky Ug ts.
Baker.641-0763Btwn9·1, beach.$600.831·0300 962·9801. area. Amwer Ad . 505. open beam ceilings, a/c. e class1f1ed line of type. Minimum ad is 3 lines. Please print • Moo Fn L a r g e 1 b d r m V 111 1 2 ., • ., ~:ioo ...... _ 944 & 892 sq. It. at Sl.25 I I · · w/dishwasber', carport, ersa es, spac ous. Rm. in lg. bse. All fac., 1 --~ ...,u3 . per sq. ft. Call Mark Kiki • Pain Y • •2Br.1Ba.1395 ldryrm Westside.$400. bdrm. 2 ba. Security milefrOCC.$210/mo FF. 30Prof, non-smkr, at673-6606.
1 child OK. no pets. 2265 ~ gate. club house. ocean pref.957·B>.5 seeks sbar'd bsng. Bch -=-.;;-=.~=------• r-------------------------------1 •
D lh le 6'5-N94. BLUFF AREA view $75:s7-199'1 ~. Mohll 4100 area. Answer Ad #505. AllPOIT I -
Eutside 2 Br. 1 Ba. near 3 br, 2 bt l\.; mi. to ....................... 642-4300,24hrs. UlCUT1VE • • sch°:J~..f no pets. $425 beacb. .642-6153. HUI IEACH &IAY SlALABMOTB. Male non.smoker to SUITI • • 0· · 1 B 1 Ba Small yard 2 Br sharp. yrb' $650 Wkly rent.a.ls now avall. share 2 bdrm. No pets. Several offices avail. l.n • • SP A CI 0 US 2 B R r. · • 2 Br. hu,gededl, furn. or $200/month, 1st and lasL full service exec:. suite · garage. No pets. $400 $112 Ir up. Color TV ADULTS Bum cl~ga, Mo. 367 "A" Hamilton unfum. S750yrly Phones in room. 2274 Call 751-4'mafter&J>m. Joe. nr 0.C. Alpport. • •
lrjkll,servbar,refnge. 641·0763 btwn 9-t Mon-J .R.PROPERTY Newport Blvd CM Mshr4brdplx,N.B .. nr 752-0869. • •
$425/mo. No pets. 2256 Fri MANAGERS 646·7'45 beach. $212.50 +utHs. NEWPMT BEACH ::/sM · 50-7356 & . IMSTAMftH! 675-6113 673-0364 Live at Newport Beach 646·2225,6.11·7!N6 URI • •
1t•5TS1Dt 2 Br. 2y, Ba. l650sq. ft. 31EDIOOMS <P .C.HI SlOO weekly. Nr So. Cat Plaza, award P~bMRWr~~i~>N • •
-Twnhse. w/every xtra. 21ATHS Pine-Knot Motel. winning PeotridgeCove SHERATONH<YJ'EL
2 Br l Ba. pool.side apt.. big dbl gar & yard. $675 MONTH 645-°'40 2Br Condo to ahr. pre(er 1249 sq ft in pll.L'lb, full • •
laundry rm., cklee to all. Adults. Pet OK. 164.5 Mo. 129 35th St, lower unit. VecaticNI...,. 4250 non-smoker, partly furn, service office bldg. Im· • No ""U. Call for appt. 67.,6336 d~" ......,,, x.l t d Avai·l no-spa, nnnJ, gar. S300 mo. • ""' .r ~..,_, n con · ~ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• A 'l"l-1o ·15 ( 714 ) press Ive Spanish decor, TSL M mt.642-leo3. th St B . (213)-.111L OCEANFRONT2&4 Br. lli°!!u . antiques, tile floors, in· • •
Lie 1 br, l ba, refrig, ow. ~Bs;.~~1~ t; deck: is:s i Br condo. ssso mo, Avail. Winter. Weekly/ ~·,,_. t e r i 0 r p 1 ants & Add $2.60 for each addttlonal llne for 8 tlme1 W/Side, avail. now, mo.646-0329 Versailles , Call MoathlY .673-7173. Yg,prof.ror 2tir.2baon balconies.Sl.1.5/sqrtror • •
/mo. 64CMaJ7 QUIET ADULTS over 3S, 213/830-2323 Richard. PALM SPRl!"GS. Pvt Penin. \'I bit lo ocean, 3 yrs. Contact owner •
1 Br. utlls. pd. $370. unfum lBr. Avail Nov. 2BR, Util paid. $650. 1st hom~. pool/Ja~. In Ex· $250. Tom646-4200day directly. I •
carport. Quiet adlts. no Beaut. landscaping. No lut&sec:S200. 8efore6, elusive Tennis Club PJ~ i~11a~~· rf.v\BA. &n7517 • Pub lish my ad for 8 days starting I. pels , 383 W. Bay . pets.LEEWARDAPTS. 673-1166.Aft6,55M693. area.$800wk.l-32J.974.3 ec' r 1536-cm:* re-W • I. ~-9516· 2020 Fullerton. CM. 1 bdrm oceantront uso Lrg Big Bear cabin. Pool d .$250. IALIOAISLAMO ! Classification I
2 Br. Bltns, enclsd gar. 631-0397 mo All util paid Call table, color TV, 2 rplrs. G~1 Private office for rent •
UpperApt.U90 Mo.765 ttwl~tewleedlll40 lMpm,67$-1642. · Sleepal4.714/54S-6916 fot"l..t 4350 w/ba lcony t o shr Name I
Hamilton. 760-0734, ..., B lB _,.,. I 0 a~to!U..-4,.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/other ft .. •·t *"""mo. 1 • 6Jl·!402 •u••••••u••u••••••u 2 r a, -yr y pn ....--.... ~ .. ..., _, A . THE WtlfR.I Tiii beams step& to beach. ....................... S!orolt ~ 851·9794 d dress I •
Lrg clean 2BR, gar, LuxuryAduJtunltsalaf. 1116w. Balboa Cut livingexpenses! on Ball>Oa Peninsula HEWPOIT • •
adu)ts. noPd,5· s.m. 2178 fordable 6 . I 1 2 &: 3 213/8t!S-2:542 Est ab I is h ed 1971. next to F1.111.oM oo~ rt EXIC tr:•_._ City Zip Phone I
"B' Placenua.545-~ Br. Well 7eco.:ated. Modem 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Featured In~ Mag. 120~«> AvaU for :;,i~e in • 11'
Cozy bach. Easl~1de. Olympic lize PQOI. light· frplc, dBbwbr, garage. 1 Large Cllen~e I e . 673-2!N3,673-~ ooeof Npt'aexclusiveof· • Check or M.0 . enclosed 0 '•
yard, good loc. util pd. ed tennis court, Jacuul, houu from beach. SBOO Pe non al att!lnt1on le Sm car or Storage. Safe & fice complexes. Quiet., I
§31·3146 park like landscaping. mo. Yrly.675-1642. ~~WI Kreerung. Time Secure. CM. $45. handsome setting in-• Charge my ad to: •
Nice 2 Br. 1 Ba. Cott.age Moel beautirw bldg. in 1 Br. Yearly. garage v H~TES 6'13-77fl eludes ; • m:ept/phone ·•• # 1
1
•
$450 + 2 Br. 1 Ba. in 4-H.B. parking, step to beach, Storage dble garage covera,o Kitchen• 0 E p
Plu"'25.8'M55laft&. '*°8lt $440 Mo. 673-3958 or 83U13t downtown Runtingt-0n Util. * anltortal * too X ·----•
SMS. lBRI, fridge.73Al~~CJ~ MARl.-SWALI 544.a99. llG m a£ Beach.llOOmo.536-5050 free p~/month • • ',.
no pets. miuc. 2 ' 3 Br. Townho11.ae EASTBLUFFF. Spacious eonf/ctSemo :n Meta del Mar area. S45 *Ample parking• Secy 0 · # E w 18tbSt,f13.T11! AJ)U. Patios. ain&Je • l BR . pool, Quiel L ''S e 5 t ~ a y Mo. Call 751·9905, leave Serv avail. For viewing • xp. '• • 2Br. 28a. Near So. C. double car guacea, pleasant area. Single Male/ emele RooJD· mgaaae. call Qualified Servkea L I
Plaia, S.A. Luxury Con-near Hunt. Harbour. adult. No peta. S500 mo. ~ t.i:l'iO i'!..,~too1 CM nr Baker ft Fairview. lncatt7~40 19 ------------------------------•
do. w/pooi, adl.tlta only. Cbildm!OK.... 844-478'7 cam .. ti~ . for·~· a Storace/1mall car. llACH .. OMT • r---------WE 'LL PAY THE POSTAGE -------------, • '550.833-#74. HUNTINGTON BAY L&2Br.oceaovu,nrpler. (213 . SSO/mo. Weeltdaya OMClaDG 1 1
Spaciou• t Br. Garden CONDO MOO yrly. Chair lift. 552-U43 • for leue POI and JJth ~II:· {·:. 111111 N~O:~PMEOA;sls~T:EA~GYE I ~·::. ·:· Apt.Pool6rec.AJ1utlls 2 Br. 1~ Ba. Patio, Resp.cpb&e•U Fto1hr2,brcoadolnH.8. Offk•..... 4400 . paldE1i':!;.:C· carport, wuber/dryer 3 Br 2 Ba duplex, lower. w/aame. Tennla, pool, ............. ••••••••••
v :L:.A •A~< incl. Water&LrNbpald. ~ bllt to beach, xlnt Vl/D. l:n$ + ~ uLlla' •votDHMMtUMT ll§l !!!f!!!'E_ve._~!!· Comm. pool. Adwta, no road. Mall now. Frplc, deR.f7H70 " l?Ui•TulUDSA _......_-= ........ ......,..,~o..;.;;;...-
414-IHAt&TOM peC.t.$S.2S+lllODdepollt. 111, lndry adalts, no llale 3M5 1br Sbr, 2ba N CE UNITED STATES
lbdrm, crpll, mini· Altnt,pofee.N$.2000. r:· Yrl.y mi lit, IHt btenrSCoPlua/Frwy. Only•-I ft I •I ! • ~~r:~:i.rp. m5. 8::~.2ci:0.~1:: ,$57~•lels. lZ4ethSt, ri--~+abare utUa. Ml:S=~ 1• ~ Fl~S~~~~~~f~O~J~:~A~E~A~~L:~NIA ~.
Woocley wallpapered 1 ~71•~ r-:12<~:;~1 2 br, 1ba,1ar, trpk. 1~ WANTED z 11/f rmmta 01CU11YI '• a I' •
bdrm. witbnewcarpeta. 1a er · · ' blkatobeaeb.21230that. totbr4brhouleblH.B. SWTIS • .! POSTAGEWU.8EPAOBYAOOAESSEE IJ. Adalta, no,.U. l3IS mo. M . ITS.P ..._ · IN .. 0 C D
Afktorllll.m·•· • Sm J Br. I Ba. Pool, Rutland Roed WeakUff MATWIPllSOM HmlrAM • < range Ollt ally Piiot 1 •
THE SEVILLE 2 Br. .,.ao. Oii Oil No peta. Area. SSOO mo. lBR. a bdrm ..._ M tbe PLAZA .. 1. ,.,, P1•111 'fl/lac. AduJtt, Cr)lttl ---Of-74". Comn:_unJty,pool. CWalkll watert. ... rihlady New lux_.,aftke ~ • ~ ~·P.:t;• '::; ~J~ 2br,2~~NDW..:..,,eoec~.· ~;5.~t4°l'w~it22 10r • ..... -.--• • In Inlae'• bu1leat e O
·•1 •Sant.I Au. '4a. r •• _. •. r-•"' .,,..._.... =.'i.~' :::'(~ ·.1 1011580 eau t.s.-.ga. ua w .. kr i'• ,.,. NI '"",.,,... wtu
1AST11D1 ...,, 1 aa. 1 •· 1L_ • Pl 0• -· .. ··-.. ••••••••• ,..,. ..... .._ •tmtr 330 Yf. l•Y 91. · •tt11, prt •lr11c:e. Tfll I · · HS. 18R, Oer~ £!!!..•.-..., r • I Cotta Meta, CA 12'21 Ill .,..._ • ..._ ...... .-..Mr ... _ ..... •I I
Cali' -.WI._. r.r WA&l101MCM ~art. a.a 1" C.M. UU. Cal • 1 ., ...... :w·;;,•;:;;111 .. ~= ... .., :.:=•~ ••uf •••••••••
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 5, 1981
h• 111 '"••• IHO ..._.W.W 710G CL ut1 Ir IOM ....................... • ..................... .
.... r.e.•-••••••••u At\l'let1ve Ladl8 would AUTOIM<YttV£
S w { m Ill l 11 I Po o I aDvt lo party w/~ Call ,Aln
Cbtmleal Strvitt Bull· Lynn or Lau.ne anytime. COUMTllMAM
nua. l.a1una Nl111tl ..!Qlt383_ Oulerablp or rorelgn tttL No o p Mt'tllary auto parts eiperience
Wlll lra\n. ~.ooo. ruil .,...c, ... , preferred. CalJ Olen for
a111ou11t req Will net IL-~ an appointment. s.o.ooo +. ca11 Collect ~urn 1orc..-va
Mon ·frl t ·S P M. 24Hra 641.0190 IOWIOYCE B:Jtl.O l c•Jca..cb
MeMy toL.t 5025 ... AM Dl/MC/Yhe 1:.'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Widow hu money to loan
for RE . Sl0.000 up. No
cr.idit cheek, no penalty. Ca It Dnlaon Anoe.
673·7311
Mort1111a. Trwt ~ 5035 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••• PSYCHJC ESP
READINGS
by AMANDA
FR EE QUESTION
ANSWERED BY
PHONt:
CALL 673--0836 NOW' •••••••••••••••• S.etler ~ Co. All types cl real estate CHORESUNLlMITED
lnveatme!Uainct UM&. Personal to comm 'I strvic;_es. 645-S194 S~~~-BEAUTIFUL Mexican
..-' -ladies seek mature i.tn· 2171 545-06 I I cere gentlemen tor mur
Q PAY nlEMOOT riage. P1r }tour TD's ' notes t714)SJll-002'1 __ Al ~~ COEDS-Would love to
673-7311. party with you Call Sue
Eich. S400K equity an or Kathy anytime
OlltJ. So. Lag. home ror 953-9363 _
you TDs. Call Paul '•raCM1al s.r.fcn 5360 ~--1648=:<:.·-----•••••••••••••••.••••••.
••• • ••••••••••••••••
A. TCMKJI of Closs..
Escorts/Modeling
M F&Cooples
835-~ MC Vasa
• "•f•cc• .. s 5100 Trani 5450 ..............................................
WO SOUTHAM ERICA MEN'S CEHTEI TRAVEL SERVICES Pre11uncy testing, Im· Are my specialties. Tcry
med •. results. Low cost Jackson Tours 759.~3 abortion All methods or -------
birtb control avail 24/hr
line. S47·9495 "f'°,J::t!
SCUMUTS
ANSWERS
Plaque -Wafer
Lucid -Stolid -
OILWELL I diacovered a great tax
loophole The only lhmg
is ~hat lo use it you have
to be 6S. in college and
own an OCL WELL.
Happy A.ds 5120
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Jobs Wanted, 7075 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Flex. Hn/Taletth
lntelli gent. dependable
woman to assist you
Int. & Landscape Design
\ulomotive
PIX OPllATOI
Automotlv~ background
preferred. Xlnt com
pany benefits. Ask ror
Debbie Juel~on, Allen
Old s C1d1ll:ac 28332
Camano Capistrano,
Laguna Niguel
49S 0800 831 ~
IA.IYSrTTEI
needed part tune our
home. Own transporta
J 1on. 645-~...ilfitr S PM
Bab ys1 ll tr, ligh t
bsekeeping lJve an or
out. Hrs Oex Sparush
speakingok
_ __[7S·Z123 Maria
Banking
TELLER
Posltiott hnmtd avail
I• Nwpt lch for
c:-.er oritwttd iltdi•
w /prior H~r hi a
bank or savinqs &
loan.
Wt offtr the suc-
ceuful ~c.t lllnt
wagH &. be.fits as
wtll as "*" for a6-
v a.ce111tttt. Contact
us now to txpore the
possibilitiH.
Appi ccrtiofts beincj GC•
cepttd btwn I OA.M·
3PM call
(714)
631-9205
CITIZENS
------
ALL JOBS FREE
CLEllCAL
Secretary
M aJor lrvlne i:ompuny
see k s 110 1 ~ed
proress1ooal and1vldu11l
to JGtn their very lovely
corporate orric·e There
will be a great deal or
Interfacing with all
departments so position
wi ll be b usy and
interesting Company
ha11 outHa nd1 n g
benefits and says
Sal It)' is open
llht JolmOll
'72-H55
Trainee
This beautiful fJbh1on
Island t'Ompany seeks a
bright trainee \\ho has
some on·ount1ng
classes and wanti. 10·
grow and le:irn This
neat company has its
ow n spa and lots or
othi:r goodlrs Starting
salary lo $750 ..... ,,.,.
t7l-H55
Mail Clerk
Previous experience
\\OUld be nic·e but not
nl'C'essary Tht.'re as
soml' heavy hrtmg as
this IS a lar~e <'Ompany
and thl' mail ~arks gel
hU\') The rompany
nfft!rS a \ L'ry ~ood
benef It parkagl' and
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Photography
Mrktg oC New Products
Property Management
Re mod & Upgrading of
Res1d Comm Property
Xlnl refs. Bonded. FED SA. VINGS
LOA.N
I ~a Ian "111 Sldn at S7l.IO
& Rita Johnt0n
MAKE SOMEON[ HAPPY
M.UE SOMEONE $Mll E
Place a HAPPY AD
In this column
for ooJy S3.2S
Call 6'2-S678
Write Ad ll947. Daily ,
1 Pilot. Box 1S60. C~t 92626 '
Housekeep111g Job l''ant
ed Lave-In. small salaQ .M agg1e 552·809? eH'
First
Christimi Church
PRESCHOOL &
DAY CARE CENTER
792 Virtoria. CM
tcnrner Victoria &
Plarenliai
ENROLLING NOW' lst JO children enrolled
Sl0.00 Discount Hrs
6 30AM-6.00PM Part
time students accepted
548-3468
3300 W. CstHwy, MB 972;tt55
EOE &Mf11 File Clerk lllll!!!!!!l!!!ll!!!!~lll!!ll~lll!!ll ... •[ Important company an --------•l ~l'\\ port llearh sl'eks Banking per~on who t•an SP<'ll TELLER fur lht'lr l<1r"w f1hnR
FULL TIMI:: dt.>pJrtme11t Thi~ 1s a
Pos1t1on avail in our lot more rnterl'slrng
South Coast Plaza ofrice than it sounds as they
Please cootuct file an man) d1rrerent b \\ap It I!> also a Kathy Am urgcy starting Jl()mt tn helter 171415404066 I h1n RS \\II h1n l he
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
tompam Salan starLs
at $600 "uh excellent
benefits
Working student girl SavlncJS & Lomi
needs free rent in ex· 695 Towne Center Dr
IUta.JolltSOft
979.9955
change Cor omce work Costa Mesa. Ca 92626
or hsekpog. Answer ad Equal ()ppe>rtunity Secretary
THANK YOU TO BON #504. 642-0X>. Employer
NIE at Haar lnterna· Refined lady. avail as l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lllll-!!!!!!l!!l I n t e r n a t 1 0 n ° I
honal ror keeping my traveling comp Cor ram1 co r Porat 1 on w 1th
good loolcs throughout ly with chil d or Sr BANKING headquarters near John Um last year. You're a Citizen67S-68:11 _ LOA.M PROCESSOR Wayne Airport Sl'<'kli d f f Barbe b r I g h l a It r 3 C l 1 V e anl!lS 1c r. H•lp WCll!fed 7100 Local Newport Bear h mdl\'ldual tu 11110 their
Lost I Fo.d 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Savings & Loan has •m· rapidl} J!rOwlOR starr.
••••••••••••••••••••••• A.MSWERIHG mediate operung for 8 This company has an loan pr()('essor Conven· SERVICE ltonal Real Estate loan nutstandmR beneC11 and
P T help wanted no exp experienre required \ acauon packaRe and 1~
nee Answenng Service BUSY OFFICE Satar~ a ht>aut1 ful pldce to .:FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Cil:
$3.SO per hr. tostart commensurate with ex-spend your day Salary
Call : m3333 ~ Q,_E. penence Full msuranre to SlS.600
A.NSWERIHG benefits & paid career llhl .JolltSOft '
SERVICE apparel. Please call· 979.9955
642.5678 Part lime & Full lime Ms. Denny Pans1a
Lost; lge F blk & wht
Alaskan Malamute dog.
lndjanapolis & Newland.
K. g. Kids heartbroken
Reward. 900-4635
d & Newport Balboa Savings graveyar evenm&!>. ltOO lrvme A\'e Clerk Typ1'st no exp necc m1mmum Newport Beach
typing reqwred Call M FE o E An acrurale 4S lYPIDR
631-0140 E 9 .& l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llll!!!!!!!!!Jm!!!!!!l!!!ll I speed \\1 II I a nit you a
Artist/Production Busy Barber concession. 1 pos1t1on 1n nne of
Irvine Publishing Co. man orrice. private Fashion Islands most
needs production artist Country Club. Send re· beautiful companies. for magatineandpromo Plenty or room for work. Paste-up & type sume lo: 111 Big Ca nyon advancement as this is
LOST : Rmg, man's gold,
w/1olitaire diamond.
REWARD! 673-7704
Lost: keys, brass snap-on
type keyring, vie Nwpt
Blvd/Bristol. 546-S3S7
Dr. Newport Beach, specking skills a must. Calif. 92660 a I a r g e go ahead
Needs lo know stat organizallon There will
camera 1·2 yrs exp •BIKESTORE • he a vanely or duties.
Co nta ct · Rebbecca Assist Manager or not JUSt lYPlnR Salary Pound: CaimTemer, M.
Chris tians Farmers
Mrkt, El Toro. 496-3276
S49·4834. X 2S2 mech. Cor Schwmn de 10 $800.
"SSIST"UT MGR. aler. Must have prior llht JolmOll
F~d: A~tralian Cattle Doe, 10/l, female, blue
m•rle. vie Mesa & Jrvll\e, S.A. Hts. 631·1030
~ _..., stor e exp Salary Responsible person O\'er 10 400. 544·983.5 972-H55
21 lo help manage busy
pizza parlor S·6 evenin gs BINDERY
per l''eek. Some exper. Need outgoing selC
1n ras t rood & 'or starter. p time for
management preferred variety or dul.les Prmt
Starling salary com· ing, N B 644-8232
s
Found : Young m ale
Siamese Seal Pomt Cat,
vie Placentia. C.M.
ldenl.lfy. 645--5986.
mensurale w exper Ask ro r Mary or Al aCter
Spm. (7141546-3963
Found: 4/mo old German Auto
Shepherd. vie Baker. IODY SHOP SEC'Y
C.M. Call C.M. Police E . C t t Depl. after 4pm ror anfo. ~perienre nee on ac -. -Mike Warner. 673 0900 Pre~crlpt1on glasses. X63 found Sun Corona dtl ~~· --Mar 646-3379 Automotive
Found Shepherd blk tan CLERICAL
male. Malamute. blk & Sales. cleri<. light book
wltlle female Aust kee ping and cle~1cal
Shepherd, blk & tan, background requ1r~d
malt. Shepherd. brn & Xlnt company benefits.
tan fe male. Newport Ask for Mary_ Smith. Al·
Bea.ch Animal Shelter. ten O)ds Cadillac. 28332
64.t·3656 Camino .Capistrano,
Laguna Niguel FOUND: F1uffy gray & 49S.0800 831·0800
wbt small cal. 631-7548 --or 2847 Vic. CM Automotive
FOUND : Go Id t n SERVICE
Retriever. vie. Irvine CASHIER Ave/ 20th St. NB . .
lkkpr/fxrr For progress ave CPA
Cirm in Fashion Island
Call Che 1640.133.5
Imm~:=. exp
req. PT, nex hrs 1-'ull
char ge bookkeeper
w Isome typmg 6464428
BOOKKEEPER
Tustin , rull -llme. F IC,
h i ghly or gan ized.
responsible, exper. non·
smoker Good salary.
AIR. A/P, Payroll
Growing mrgr & 4
service oriented bus•·
nesses. 832-7300
CASHIERS
wanted ror auto wash m
Nwpt Bch & Irvine
areas. 644-4460
Typist
No pre\10US expenence
needed 1! you can type
This lar~e Fashion
lslJnd compan} \\'111
advance you as you can
accept responsibility
They have outstanding
benefits and their very
own spa. Salary starts
al S700.
.... Jolm.oll
972-HSS
Banking
W e have over 40
pos1t1ons available tn
a lm ost ever y joh
£unction imaginable in
the bank and S&L
industry
Ctilt c.,..,
'7J."H
-_.. .f!!'t :~.,.~~---- -
I I
~~~-~ ..... !.~!~ ~!.~ ..... ?.~~! ~!.~~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~.~ ..... ?.!~~ ~~.~~ ..... ?!~! ~~!~ ..... !.!!.o
COMPANlON for lovely,
tldt rly lady. Requite
menu. ex per .. non
smoker or drinker Rt:f•
j-42-2237
COOIC .
NEEDED. Broiler cook.
apply now at CJ. Fish &
Co. Sunu t Bch al
Ptters Landini No exp
nee..!-S92 ~or 846.{)623.
COOK
Mon ~'n days Apply 10
prr1on, weekdays 5 6
p m , t':al 11 ba s h
Restaurant, 179 !';. J7th
Sl., Cosla Mesa.
Counter help, am shirt. no
exper nee Apply 10
person, Oippit,y Oono~.
1854 Newi><_!!t Bl&~ M.
DELIVERY DIUVBtS
lmmed P.fllme open
angs available for de
bver.Y drivers Mus i be·
21 with good driving f l'·
cord & tible to work
e\'enangs Starti. rrom
$3 5().$4 hr t lips APP·
ly daily aller 5pm. Me &
Ed's Pa n.a. 17th &
T ustin , C M Also
Bristol & Mcf adden. s A
DELIVERY /STOCI<
F 1t1me. xl11l benefits
10-7 or 2·»11 JO 495 I':
_mhSt ,C M
Deliver)' men o~er 18 Cor
L A Tames to homes
C M Jam 6am ~<'onomy l'ar required
No collerting
$400 $450/mu. + bonus
646·063!. or 646·~4
Delivery driver and saleb
trainee Moonlighters
and l'Ollege stuenl~
"elt~ome Ea~11> cam
SlO SIS pt>r hr Call art er
I PM F.I Toro Arca
951 2642, or Garden
G ro \' t> 638 4605
DEHTA.L
Ex per ortho ass1s tanl
Cor rull time position
Xlnt ~afar; & benefits
644 l40S
Dental
ORTHO RDA ASST !
Exper Ol•edt>tl .
t·h a1rs1de 25 301 hrs week Pleasant
working t-ond1llons Xlnl
benefits H B Rose.
846·2888
DENTAL
Mewport lffch G.P.
Mtds PT h~st and
FT chair 11df assis-
tant.
642-5243
DENTAL TKH
~: x p l' r d e n t a I
le<"hn1can Partial tlept
Prorei.<; & rm1sh etc
Satar) OPt'n Call \I f
549·2002
Des11t11er
HVA.C
Sr. DtsicJitr Minimum rive }ears t'X
per con~ engr ofrice nr I 0 C Airport Comm'I &
ln~l pro1ects
Dahl. Taylor& A~oc
17141 ~·5234
ELECMIC
SAlf.S
M an uf ac t ure r 's
ri:prenntatlve with u
pandlnfl hnt~ In rice
tronk <'(>mpont>nts ~et-k11
aalts engineer trainee
Attractive comm1ss1on
r a te 11 nd benef1l11
packa2e otrer«t For 1111
pototment ca.11 1194·7257
Est1m11tor
Wa nt e d Roor1ni;
estimator Old expand
lnl comp11ny Lookin11
for md1\lduals who art•
ram1bar wtlh the ('Oil I
struct1on inclu.~lr> No
roo(an& up n« Salary
(.' o m m 1 ~ s 1 on l' a I I
642 7222 for a~.
l::xet·ut1\'l' Secretary
Esta b l1~hed Ornn~t'
County Hldng t1rm
Shorthand required
Send Resume PO llm.
t7S09 lrvme92'7_p
Furniture store need:. t.le
pt>ndable girl, p time ror
IHe oHtce \\'Ork. selling &
hte dusting S4 SO ht tu
start Plt>ase apply m
per~on, Tues Sat at 1931
Newport Ulvd C_M
Gal Fnday
~;nergl'llC. ~trung uHit·e
prurcdures. detail
person S900. mt.'d ID!>
642 5251 Non smkr
GF.:'-IERAl.OFFICI-~
The rt•\ no bu.~anes:. lfltt·
show bus' lk'rome pa rt
or Seba~uan 's hf(• hm·
Peopll' orientt'd per:-.on
needed 1mmetllateh for
boA oHtC'e dl\'ISIOn .1\pp
ly m person on.I) St'ha'
t1a11 \ 1401'1t•oSC
Genl'r.il ~
SJ1d l'Un~trut·llon help
needed Cood com1>Jny
benefits & wurkma.: at
mosphcre S3 50 !>l'r hr to
~lart Appl) m pcr,on
only Sf:f\ASTIA.'J'S ISO
A\e P1<:u S<.:
GENERA.I. OFflCE
Lt>ad1ng pest rontrol <·n
needb r tame gent•ral uf
f1C't' pt'rsonnel Entr)
level pos1t1on Typing r£'-
Houatk eptr a.id Uv1-10
Enall•h •lilt•kUl& Must
drive S4MX> ptr rnonth
$S2 70'5.
IHSUIAHCI CLIU
Loc111 otrice uek1>
pertoo w1lh 1ood typan11
sklll11. Pleuunt phone
manner & ability to
work under some pre
u urt' lo:surance bkad
hel pfu l Xlnt benefit~ &
kx'11t1on EOE. Mt Or
rork_.. ll33 ~ll
JANITOR ,ART TIME
Immediate opening for a
j11n i l o r to wu rk
weckendis. day shift F'or
lnttrvlt'w call Mikr Va
v1a n1
714 041 1616 EOE M F
JA.HITOR
ltalell(h •ulls Hospt an
Newport 8earh hai. an
imnwd opening for 11
Janitor Monday ie'mlay,
day shift Xlnt trln~l'
benefits pkg for 10
lcrvlt'W cull Jo)hUJ
Whiskey <7l4>64S 5707
EO E M f'
lC111dscape DtsiCJMr
Exprr F tame
Capistrano Gardenb
Nursery 32136 M1~uehto
Rd SJC 661 6666
1.1-:GALSECR~i'ARY
Exp an e1v1l hllgallnn &
clomesllc law Saler\
OJ>en 54!1 4878
Lea;al Secretary w exp
in C1\·1t lJt & fam1I}
I.aw Send resume &
salary req lo. Ge1lt!r &
Murtm, t6000ovl'St Sit•
I~, N ll _
L.1quur Stnrt• Stocking &
Cash Hel(1-.ter l'\
pl:'rien<'e nece~s.ir)
OH'r I K 1\ppl) behH'l'll 8
& 3 weekda}~ 18H8
llJ111·ent1a, Cc'>l.ta ~lesa
L1\e 1n hoU!iekeeper c·oin
pan1un Elderly rouµll•
Must speak English
Ha\'e Valid Or1,eri.
t.1csence Rer Heq
548 0794
J.ookanf! Cor interesting
part time JOb T) pin.:.
no ~honhand requ1rl'tl
20 hrs per week includt.>s
weekends. OHH'l' on
Coast Hwy _646-7431. q uirl:'d Office t•xpN
helpful <.:all Ella . Mon . l•--------9· 12 979 6(Yll M aantenance
BUILDING
GENERAL HRP MA.IMT'EHA.NCE $1000/Mo and util1l~ \\orkt•r
• needed Good dm mat rl'
SECRET .... ,... curd a must \'al1d
• ""' "'1o drt\ ers hrense required •ORDER EHTRY x Int Co bener1 t s
•WA.REHOUSE plca,;int working t•n
•DISTRIBUTION nronment Contact Pat
•RECEPTIONIST rtlllls AMF Sci<'nt1f11·
& other pos111on.' 0 ril I 1 n ll Int I 180 I I
MO EXPER. NEC. Mitchell So . ln-101· ~upt>r bl•nef1ts Yount: ,_55•7•905-l•E•O•f•:lllMl!!llllf--people pref •-
171 41847-2422 M.inager Trad1t1onal
Women's 8nut1c1ur
GIRL FllDA Y Most bt· cx11ent>m·ed 1n
~ da}~. 10 3 30 1\nsw<•r :ill phases. Send resuml'
phont'. lypl', 1Jlll'll1)( to Ad II 705. Daily l'ilot.
Call Hetty hetwecn !l 11 P 0 Hux 1560, Cobia
642 2053 M e~a, 92626 ffiSO.._ <.:a
Jack al tradH MA.HAGER
Cor growm~ SJJl)l't!>\\ear Natural JWre & }ot:urt
Co No sewani: Part bar Exper onl) Call
t1ml! Ca11642-!IG52 t 63 1 4408 or write P 0
DOCK ATIENDANT . HA.IRSffilST l:loJI 11088T. NPw1inrt
Except mg applications needed Cor progrc.>,:ol\ t' llt'al'h, 9G660.
N e w ~O rt A r <'hes beauty saloo m lmne MA.MICURIST I ~ ~~nr~e~~ ~· Jud) I Exj>er'd pref 857 4686 ncl'dt!d for progrt>si.n e
'
HANDY MAN l'art t1ml! beaut) s.ilon an lnmc
Driver tow truck rtal bed SS hour Must haH' toob llSi 1686
exp Over 21 with Rood 646 4Hi MA.RKETIHG
D R I V I NG rec n r <l HARDW A.RE SA.LES MANAGEMENT
Custom To~ng 751 1515 Full or part lime Appl) TRAINEE
DRIVER HECEJVER In pn~on Crn\\ 11
Growing co has xlnl up· Bardwarl' 1024 lrnnr
ply Cor Om·er Receiver tWestcll(f) NB
Gen knowledge of
plumbing produrl~ Good working tunll
Salarv open f'rin~e
beneC.ts The Bath ~!art
§7S-4830 !Mr Petersl
DRIVERS WANTED
Early morning home de·
livery L.A. TIM ES
lrvane & Newport areas
$4 25+ mo Jess .
546-0235
HOUSECLEANERS
Prerer i:ar or drt\'l'r;.
he $.~ hr \\Ith expt>r
full 01 pl lime 960-Jif.G
HOUSECLEANERS to work ror J an1ce ·s
R111{gedy Anns. 4 days
w~ek, 8·!1/m. 675-~14.
HOUSECLEAN ERS lo
S5 hr P T. ca r. 645-5123
$1200
PER MO. TO ST A.RT
Mo u peritnce nte.
17 141~8-58.2
MASSEUSE& RECn.
Must be attracli\•e and
have pleas!IJll persona Ii
ty Apply in person only
12 noon to 8 pm Circle
Massage & Health Spa
2501 E Paci hr Coast
H\\)
MECHANlC
With or without tools
-~10
M ..... ANt
Experienced Je"ront of
Cice Extensive typlne
Pl111tic Sur#cry ofOcc
Huntington Beach. Xlnt
salary for eit<'e llent
worker. 848-1 l:tl
tedical
Front office Jl('drntrars
Some insuran« up nee
S49 om
MODRS/ESCORTS Tu!> DQ!ful'l>~ ~71
Models needed All types.
Men, women & C'h11d ren
No e!l?Jlec. 548-7762
NEWS DELIVERY
2 5am, M-F StOO+ \\k
Irv, CM_.. NB 953 8110
Nur.1c11 A1dl":; 7 3 J()pm &
p lime. 3.307 JOpm &
3 It :JOpm Sm t'fmvul
hospt ur C M. 1''111r
_ground~. ~9-~I
Nur!>mg
Nuri.es Atdell & L\'N'!>,
all shifts. Call D u ~
646 7764
Nursing
l.VN. 3 11 30prn Sm
conval hospt nr the•
CM F:urgrounds tin
mac , gd stJrf1n1t
549 3061
Nur..mR
Non cert1f1ed u1d' S4 oo
per hr 1':x1't'll l'Orkml>\
rond1t1ons and bencf1l!.
~:OE Bayview ('on
\eleHent BOhPltal.
642 3505 Carol.
orr1eL·
Girt Fridcrv ~1ust be good \\1th nom
ben full t1mt.', ~phi
i.hlft aCternooni. ore
964 2239 ask C1,1r M 1kl'
PART·TlME
Subsl1lute caC1"ter1a
\\Ork $4.3!1 ·hr Food
Serv11•e Dept. Newport· Mesa Unified School
Das t Ap ply al 1857
Placentia Ave C M
760-3273
PA.RT TIME
Crew Supel'\'ISOl'S, work
p llml' e\'e n 1n~s &
wee kends. Supcrv1~1ni:
the door lo dmr sale~
l'rew of younl{Stl•n. E~
ccllent earnana.:l> for
person "tlh ab1ht) 111
mot1\•ate. Van or larl(e
rar as needed Call
\fed1a ~1er('hant5
213-427-2756 EOE
Pt>tll1on r1rculaturi. S1 1 hr ~· T, P T Fun &
eas_y JO_b 84°"'~12
Presllge Womens shor in
Cdm M usl ha\ e ~inl·e1 L'
' interest in Quaht) 1\p
parel Send rl'pl) Cart• of
J ~loon 177F RIH'r!>Hlc·
\\e~B~
P /TIME EVENINGS
CeutHlinq
Y ouffl Ccrrien
Adults with outsland1n1:
attracll\ e personahlll'i'.
who enJO> l'Ofkml! with 10 15 )Car old )outh'
E'emngs 69 pm Call
642 4321 , e'<I 313 het~een 2 pm and 5
p m Ask for .\ndrea
P Tl M Jo: lYPtnR, J(t·nt•rnl
ofra c·e 5 dav,, 12 -IO I 30
Orange Co A1rpo11
area J1!1..~_ard, 955 J6JJ
ll.E. ROICR
MIWPOITMACH
Strooa back&round '" R.E flo1nce with rt·
sidtntla l mort••11 e
brokeraee. construction
finanre. takeout flnanc
in&. prnaioo/trust fWld
ealts. Must have admln
exper. to fuJly man•&~
mtearattd R E finance
operal1on.t Je'ull rorp
beoeht pro1ram with parl1c1 pa11on oppl')':.
Send r1:11u nH t o
ClassUled Ad 111'2. Oa1ly
Pilot. P 0 Rox ISGO.
Cos i a Meu. CA
92626·0500
ltuiv!_IMJ ca.n
Operun&s for Rece1vm11
Clerk :at mall clolh tnic
store, full ume, Mon
Fri Experience prt'
(erred but will trom
Cilll 644 S070 Ask fur
Kaut
Rtctptloftist/tv~•t
Ad Agency net<l'i. front
offi ce a ppeara ore to
greet clients. answer
bus} phones. & pe rform
various oHire dul1t'~
Send resume w BllS'.'>O &
Assoc. PO Rox 8030 Npl
Bch 92660
RECEl'TIOHIST
Ptclatri< Sat onl} 9 w 12
631 lSti.3
RECEl'TIOHIST
t'or challenging R
Lour olflre Light t>JIPt'r
rcq Good tyµin11. ~pell
ing & grammtll' es~en
uot Only ll•vel headed
md1\•1duals neetl apply
Tra\d bl•nef1lll to So f'ac1r1r Submit n•,ume
llC.nc>MtST Good oppty. !or mature.
bu lneas pttlOtl who ran
worll without
aupervialon on a ptrma
nanl ba1il TyplnJ 1ktlls req 'd. Full tune Call·
962-8311 • 1$2.-0022
HST AUIWff HIBi
Part time. mat urr
counter ~P Ideal for
collt &e studl'nl• &
homemakers 11 3, Mon
F ri f lu1blt-hr•
Airport area Cull !ton
aft 2PM Cor appl
9SS·OSS4
Restaur1nl. M11ture person day and evenJna
hou rs Racquet bull
£.lub_ ~7l·IKll bet 9 4
IESTA.UIA.MT
El Roberto NOW hiring
P T day & evenrnit
(•ounter personnel. In·
terviews lOAM or 2PM Monday thru Friday
Ask Cor Ma r ia, 43
FashiQn l~land, N 8
Retail
A.SSISTAtff
MA.MAGEi
Fully experienced 1n
quality women's ap
parel Please call
1714 >557-6Ql0 or apply 1n
person Mr Elholl's,
SC Plaza
sal~
OUTSIDE SA.LES
POSITIOHS OPEN
Sellmg reader ad adv to
local merchants in a pro·
tected territory Xlnt.
comm1ss1ons & bonus
programs. good Co.
bt>neflt s Apply Pen·
nvsa\ er 1660 Placentia
AY.e CM or ~all IH2-08.!.1.
to T Lehr, 24872 Tim 1---------herwood Wa) El Toro
ll2630 SALES
COMMERCIAL I .E.
RECEPT /TYPIST Tared or selling houses 7
Full or p time. send rt• davs n week? We need
sumc lo p 0 Box 1311. one hcensee to team the
Costa Mesa, Ci\ !12626 !>kills to manage. broker
RECEf'TIOHIST commercial real estate Income rrom mgmt For NewPort Bea,'h fa\\ while )'Ou team Super
fl rm p ar l l 1 m c• benefits. l.tCe 111surance .
I! JOamlpm ~urc. t!\ health insurance & den·
penenced m6idual re tat plan Contact Ken. quired Good phone 675.6700_
technique & plca~anl lllllll~ll!'!~ll!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! personality a must Call
Kim or J une,833 9980
RECEmOHIST/
TYPIST
needed Cor multi bram·h
SALES-OESIGMER
MANA.GER ~ew f renrh Countq ·
store operung Newpon
area t:xpenenccd onl} i:ra\'el Agenc) tn ln·me Call ror 1nten 1ew .
Good phon~ '01cc and 754-0442 front oHtt•e appearance , , a must. Typan)l 55 W P~I SAl.F.S l'abnr store. full
Xl nt salarv and l'n or part tame
lleneflts Call Tommie 646-4040 833-2977 Sates
llECE"10HIST I
HOSTESS Personal a~!>l!llanl lo
Slll'('eS!>fUI. \l'r~ l)u.,~
t'XCl'Ut1ve M~t bt· l'A
treme ly altral'llH'.
su1>t•r bly i:rooml'd &
ha\'e a \'l\'J('IOUS personalit) l>ulle~ 1n
elude hght set'rl'lanal In
extremely quiet, prt.'lt}
one girl offil'l' + l·on
s1derable local dm mi:
BeneCus mdude lot\ or
'a r1et~ & rn•edum.
Rreat stanm~ pa~ & un
limited ~rowth poten·
11al Good l'dUc':1llun . s t a b 1 I 1 1 y & ~ ,. I r
mol1 \•a11un A M L'ST
Write \el) detailed let
GREAT HOURS
9A.M-2PM
or
4PM-9PM
Jom t hr Los AnRe les
T1 mt's C1rculu11on team
& adapt your work
sche d ule to your
1ires1yle Work 5 hrs a
da\ 10 a Times C1rcula-
t10.n sales orflce near
your home & have more
time for your Ca m1ly .
studies or leisure!} periods We pay hourly
& comm 1ss1ons
R.E. INVESTMEHT ter anclud.mg amb1t1t111s.
LOS ANGELES TIM t::S
1375 Sunrto\\er Ave ,
CM
540-o:Mll Earn l'•h1le \OU learn quahf1eallons. personal
II E R I T A G 1-: descnpt1on & dl''1rcd
INVESTME:-JT \\Ill satan· Wntt•~i.1.=946 EqualOpportunal}
t ca c h yuu nea 11 Vl' Daily. Pilot, PO Box 151i0. Emj>loycr
frn ancing. 1031 Ex Cost a Mt's u C \ Salesperson. ladies high
changes. investor dl' 926~·Q~. fas hion store, Npt Bch
velopment & l'OUnsehng 1---------1 area Salary + good Ex per 0('0Unselor!> re RECEPTIONIST benefits. Call 644 7100
ee1ve 100', romm The 1!> PART TIME Salesperson needed.
an unusual oppt) ror REC E.DT'IOHIST \\Omens clothing store an righ t person Conf1den ~..-'• L.aguna Beach Salary taal 1n terv1ew Call We are seekmg a Pan + co m mission +
Vince 546-SBlll. Ta me Recepuona~t to rloth1ng discount Ask
Help yourselC to a
Ilea ping sele<:lion or
Qualified Hopefuls
in the DAJLY PILOT
HELP WArfl'ED ADS
h,andle the phones m our for John 494.1134, Executive Offi ces, as ---~ ---
DRIVER W A.MTED
Male or female FT PT Apply 1n person lnme
El1,1nst, 2211 Martin.
~-----------------------~
well as assist with other rleri('al duties front or
hce appearance and
pleasant phone mann~r
a muse Hours are Mon·
da)' through f'r1d3\.
900A M to200P M
SA.LES-I' /TIME The Los Angeles Times
C1rculat1on Dept cur rently has pos1t1ons
a\ ailable m sales as a
representatl\e You'll
earn an hourly wage +
generous comm1ss1ons.
Call 957-2lit, ex t. 1204 ElECTROHICS P /T
for skilled &semi skHlrd
or we train applicants
w good math bark
ground CahC Air Na
t1onal Guard Prior
l"ll hlary helpful Call
C i ndy Gehring
7_14 979 7J6J
SELL idle items with a
Daily Piiot ClassiCied
Ad 642 5678.
Housekeeper, & Cnok
II ve in. 3 adults. no
children Own pvt rm &
be . color TV, Ir~ beaut
home 111 Anaheim Hills
Pubhr transp nl?arby
Sal based on exper
Must speak Engll~h Refs req For app'I r;11I
645·8480 Mon-Fri
IC you've never placed a
l:lassir1ed ad. you're 10
the manonty• Try 11 ont'l'
and see how quickly you
gel results Phone
642·S678
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •
: Ct.EAICAL : • • : LOOK : • • • • • • • • This 1s a sincere eff0<1 to reach an In· •
• div1dual interested in more than just a job. :
We are a large national company wh ich • • operates in the Newport Beach area. We •
deal strictly in the service business. We :
otter the following benefits: •
KIDS-STUDENTS
NEEDED
Earn $30-$60 per week .
Trips & Prizes. ~Mr.
0-C• at 519-0601.
Please call Terry Taylor
for an app()mtment al
714/557-9881
EXTENSIOH 21 4
OSHMAN'S
SPORTING
GOODS
3300 S. Fairview St
SANTAANA EOE M F
RECEf'TIOHIST
TYPIST Immediate opening 1n
loan brokeraRe cu
answer telephone, greet
public, and lite l)•pang
Call JS a tie 64().9JSO.
SALES
SALESWOMAN, mature.
apparel exper CM llatr
Sile Shop Steady part
time 541-6500
Saleswomm Men
THE FB>EIA. TED
GROUP
Is hiring professional re
tail salespeople Call
pel'lionnel Cora great op·
port unity "''Ith our grow-
ing company
(21 31721-5100
<Call Mon·Fri,llL_
toidentlfy Full l~me opportun!lY
. for bright person with •. Wed. nr Aoligua & ten key experience
Saiitiago. Sm black ' Freeway location
whltt female cat Applyloe!rson
R i& u r o I Rew a rd Mond_a~ . Friday LO$T~5
Pretlous btl1• MacP"ERSOM ki~n. blue eyes, blk tail CHEVROLET ~ears. s mo. old. "Bun-lrvineAutoCenter ny .. : Hurt bnlllen child. San Diego Freeway
8 WA RD. HMSO~. to Lake Forest Exit
CASHIER
FULL OR PT/TIME
Call Barbara, 540-3280.
CHECUICA.I
needs a rew gd dnvers.
491-8888
Clerical
GEHEUL OfftCE
P /time, l·Spm, varied
duties. 18 or over. Costa Mesa Mfg S56 -2294 Shirley __
Purchasing Clerk
Major corporation near
John Wayne Airport
seeks individual with
m i n i m u m I year
experience an purchasing
office Compa ny has :
out.standing benefits and •
vacation package and •
offers starting salary to :
~-.
1 MAJOR MEDICAL INSURANCE
PROGRAM
. 2. COMPANY & EMPLOYEE RETIRE·
MENT & PARTICIPATION PRO-
GRAM
3. COMPANY PAID VACATION
4. ANNUAL SALARY REVIEW
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Paily Pilat ·········-......... \
MacHowanl LEASING
NEEDS AGGRESSIVE
SALES PEOPLE
-NOW! -
e SALARY PLUS
COMMISSION e DEMOPLAM
e INSURANCE PUN e PAID Y ACATIOM 12 • AUTOM011VE fo'ound oran1e k1lten D-*T,.../ w/1mbtr e1CS near Clerk/D~tore, mature Polnuttia Ir 4th St. Mew C• IP1llsry person f /T or Prf gd
1'1111 Ume Mond.IY llini bo!llJ. N+7S75.
,..:z":%.:..J1•=.----a-JH-t Frld1y Oulershlp CLERK TYPIST Entry
·--• background ~essar1. I r Cocltact Elsie Tompkins evel posltiori or rt · entry person -1tb grow· .a ln1 medical mf1. in
Tustin. Typlna requjrtd
50·55wpm, pleuaat ... rreMDC!e • mlltt. Coatat (7W)5"·'1111 for
tlf!gU!ll.
lit• JohRJOll :
972.9955 • • •
5. EXCELLENT STARTING SALARY
($'11 ,000 to $12,000)
If you i::ons1dtr yourself to be a stable and
energetic lndlvidual, we would M in·
terested In talklng to you. This position is
for an accounts receivable clerk.
For a personal and oonfidentill lntervll'lf
call
714 53~7590
• • • •
i J ! • le•J••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I
PART TIME EYDlllS
We art presently attlting adulU with
plUJant personallllu who would be
lntertsted ht woncins In Siles ac Promolloo
wllh Dall)' Pitot Carriers 10 to IS ynra old
lTnUrnited etmlnp avallablf to rflbt penon.
Hrs: ~:30PM to 8:30PM, Monday thru
•'rlday. Some Saturday avallablllty. For •
•PP'>intment, call: 642-4321, aalt for Ben
Willia.ml.
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ,
, 330W.IAY IT~A~~g ... : : '• UI a QllAL llTUllllTY '--'rl• : ••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••••••• c-•• •
e HEAVY ADVHTISIMC9
SUPPOR'I:
I
~
. I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 5, 1981 7
Sell it all and put cash in your pocket!
DAY WEEK
8Days
3 Lines
I
Special flaf rate for non·commercial users offering mercban-"
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for '8 days
or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2 .60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA day, call today 6'2·5678
1 "' ~o 8 Dollars 1M neiw ~Hy Pilot 8·Day Week It's a Classified PLUS
HtlpWOllhd 7100 HtlpW..... 7100 HefpW-.ct 7100 Wl•1tW1UW.1015 fwwHw. 8050 Mhctl•aom IOIO '•h 1017 loats.hwer 9040 TroUtn,Utllty 9110 ~!.~ .. ~.!!!.o ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ······················· ...................... .
SAN OW ICH SALE: S SEC'Y IRECt::PT. Waitress, exper ln din· REDWOOD ll6'S Jtedecoralin& Sale! Like Lovt 1Gioo9t FREETO YOU Century · varrushed with Pive b.yseven, two whool
GIRLH1gh oomm1ss1on TRAINEE ner /cock~ails. Also •'to20'long.Xlntdeck· new furniture & Misc Helium Bouquets de tyroldfema1eGerman 4&0lds.M~t 11ell aluminum tra.il'r S200.
Shorl hrs 951 ·4S43, 3 day week, $4.SO/hr to busboy, rughts Ap~ly Ing. Fresh IOad arriving din rm set, SlOO. Klde·a· livered Perfect for Shepard very loving 673-9321 .=:;~::,,,7_,·l:.::::368=------
Bttdie stut. 1 girl office Creal B e n B r o w n s WHltly. Save al 55t/ft bed, ft chair, Sl7S. Oak. _ever O!_catioc. ti73-44_!9 needs room to run 12· all metal boat. 30 hp A.to Stf"tlct, r..tt
-oppty to leacn le ad· ·Restaurant 31106 Cst JI -ytJ S2S Queen bed, ns. Cof· 831'8743 after S PM Evin rude, elec ~tart, • .a. ,,.,,. ••• ........1... 9400 SK~~ vant'e. Must be 0 ood ' m,&46-........ an me. f"'"•-end •~bt-,•"t .... • REOWOOD2X6'S " •"''"'"~ " Hlliy So Laa:una ""'"' ... ...... "" ...., Slue & gold Mawcaw PP trailer, inside controls. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Busy NB chitec ural speller & have typing ·· · · Nails. 16's & 8'1. SlS 00 Lam _p s. S2S e ;it' h 4' to 20· long. Xlnt deck ' also licensed at $850, Silicon rim!. fill Celi ca. firm . Sharp person with ability, SS7·l!Q> wkdys. WA IT RESS I Wa i ter Box. 2 for S25.00 MORE! 751·3476 ing. Fresh load umvin11 needs cash. will sacr 5411·0130 other sml Toyota cars good skills !type 55 S...,..y~ w/car for wicker basket S3Hl324 weekly. Save at SS<trt hand-lamed. tulking. Isl _ w p M 1 r r 1 e n d 1 y ~ lunch serv. 9 :30·1: 30 Getting Married. selling Jim, &46-988S anytime. SlOOCl W /cage, vitamins. 17'. Whaler. 65hp. 2 tanks, Sl25/0BO. 548~953
personality for phones Small Jrvine ompany PM . Mon· Fri. Earn c__... & xtra furn incl sora book_Jood.1·628-7203 center console. radio. Brand new Sboei fainng
and front desk. Good oHers front office posi· SlS0.$175 wkly. Must be Ell•P••"' IOJO loveseat, dining table & LOSING LEASE. quit 1090 lights, cover. lrlr S7SOO FM -2. Sacnfice. S8S
benefits. Call Wendy lion. must have iood neat, personable & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4chairs,waterbed.TV. tmgbusiness.sellingout l'leos&Orgmts Eves: 545.0315; dys 543·2791bd<>ttl2
640-0772 phone personality and energetic 979.0747 art anon AEI w/Zoom lamls. st oneware, ALL sufipl.ies and rue ~·a•:t·~;;·.;;;;;·~;· 752.2584 _
Set'retary Mature typingspeedol65 WPM IOAMfora ThynstorStrobe. 2 wks blen er, etc. All less ~~~!~c~. waiting gan. never used. was 32'Spaci0\D&loadedtwn AwtotforS.
woman, pit. 1·.S. Mon 10 key a + Hours 9·S W......,M• old, paid S315 asking than 1150 842·982-.4 . room chairs. Beauty S2.954. Will sell for dsl Sprtfshr Sedan. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Fn. Phone. misc. duties Sctarttintg Losalary ,s1~. Part time. SPECIALTY . 493.5237 L879·S7M. d k I t Salon hairdryers and soo. 644-4014. w' mooring S39,SOO IMN~Rc~ro
Call mornings846-8838. on ac ma or in FASTNER CO packag· Vivltar 75·2CXS lens S12S. rg sec es w re um. hydraulic chairs. mir Upright Grand Piano, an ~·8574 READERS AND
terview at556-2S32 ing and light misc New 1280. MultlplierS30. SlSO. Queen Waterbed, rors,shelvesandplants tique. nds refinishing. 1977 SKll'J.ACk ADVERTISERS SlCRETAIY Service station attendant duties. Must good have 673·1388 aft 3 OBO. 673-9167 Also, make-up, shampoo ~ 67~187 67~71M>S k · Part/lime. Attorney's 3-IOPM. Apply al Shell commu.nicationstohelp c~ 1035 Kitc hen Table w,3 andhairproducts . l, Loaded. never epc m The price or items
office, Balboa Island. Station 17th & Irvine our counter sales fn. ...,.. leather chairs. pa1d Sl:JS Call 631·9754 or KIMI.AU. OIGAH water, flawless f111anc advertised by vehicle
G 0 0 d t Y Pin g & Blvd. NB terestin .work with good •P•E•RS•••1•A•N••::,•t•t:ns··.·•c•F••A• asking $75 Still new Enterta1ner/lll Orig mg. 494·82:tl dealers in the vehicle shorthand reqwred Call s~~ g w SERVCO IU " 493 5237 afl~r 5• 898-6809 Drake F/B cabm crwser, classified advertising 67S-S460. .. ... ,~ surroundings regiatered Beautiful -·--Ceiling Fan Casabella p;GQ, Bstofr~mn7 drastically reduced. columns does not 10· -D k FASTNER PRODUCTS. silver color Shots. Sleeper Couch. tan V1cloriao, Antique ed1 Piano, older upright. 11 646 4197 elude a applicable Secretary for construe rapery wor room 711 W 17th St CM D·l. 638-9308 w/flower design. Paid tion. 52" blades. re needs tune S250 muslse -·---taxes. li~nse. transfer lion co. m San Clemte needs sewing machine 645·6887 · SJSO, asking $200. Still S48 85 3 S48M8S exp. in typ1J1g. 10 key, operator Mon· Thurs. --CFA kittens, Himalay & 93 szn verse. 4 tulip lights. was · 1 • loots, Soil 9060 rees. Cinanre charges,
mm accounting call for 7·5 :~0 Mu st speak W.rc:~ Burms,Siamese.allcol· new.4 · $299.Take 125.730-0986 '80 M1tsuvish1 rark ••••••••••••••••••••••• feesforairpollulloncon· ap~tntment. · English. 642·1843. ....................... ors $100.$250548--8587 8 flowered swag lamps. Hid e-ii bed, like new. mount stereo system 21" v~nture w/trailer, 3 trol device certiricauons 17141 498~ Sh ii> ping. packaging, ........ , 1005 2 Adorable kitties. 1 wtute Still in Box. Reg $3S $180 I BM typewriter, w/spkr. Sl.500 sacrirlre sails, new Seagull mtr. or dealer documentary
SECRETARY \EXEC.) (I time. will train Costa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 striped SI each each. Asking S2S each S 1 o O M a n u a I l!!QQ842·~1 many xtrs. Dana Pt dry preparation charges un·
Enthusiastic, efficient & Mesa. 64S-S421 Oak furn .• library tbl. 642.4523 49J.S237 • Type w r It er, s 2 5 SfditcJ 1093 ~~~~~g;;~. ~04d1: less olhel'Wl.Se spe<-1f1ed
oraanized. w1bkkpg Sla...l.'-!.ERS $$31500.· mdeisssk1.on$7Sbkschhlav1sr .. ,Part Himalayan kittens Italian Curio cabinet.I Wa sher/Dryer. S12S ....................... bylheadveruser
" nv beaut1ful cond. $500 each BMW Prtable TV. SKI BOOTS· Garmon! ev .. ...._ / ex'! 4 day wk. Pd vac. & Eastern Oruon Singing S22:S. ~7-9Cl!9eves lO-SSOeach 760-9322 S3S Side by side fndge. Lady Starlites, size 8. 1980 Vakyne 24. crwst ..... C!.~.~.t.. 9520 holidays Send resume. T I c d . --. -957·6257 t"l?c. ...,.,., •• bo d "° ...... will contact Wnte Box e egram o. nee s Upright dbl dr fridge , Henridon dtn rm, china ..r:'""' ~2~.,., Brandnew@S 5527272 complete w/uve a ar •••••••••••••••••••••••
•945 Dail Pll l PO singers .who love to $65. New Sears, under DOCJS 1040 cabinet. server. & Rem . elec. typewriter ~-Goodl 1094 slip.Sl3,SOOOBO l'RETT1E:ST
Bo. '1560 YCos. 0 M· I perform m pubhc. Must I warranty. ~mall office ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bedrm set. 760-9322 SlSO Counter sz refr1ge "1"" '"'"I (213)433-4818, ~. · ta esa. have re I 1 ab I e size fridge $100 KEESHOND Pups. AKC. --· -nso: Alum. ladders & ....................... (213)~~ 'S7T-lllD
92626·0560. transportation. 670.1212 00.617:i Champ sire M/F Pet & Sofa beds, twin corner 493-oo87 S.-fbocrd NEWPORT 27s i6. OB IHTOWM! SECRETARY M-F,9·5. show P vt pty group wllable & J!!.!!!C. · CustomdesignThurster B S3>W> 493-6353 HSTOFfBtl
I ... N B Applactt 10 I 0 2131691 1345 aft 6 pm stora e Sl.2S. 644-4579 Paul Blaine Henn early Brand new Ridden only 4 ags. · · · mm ...... opening in 1-ca.r W..ted •••••• • •••••••••••••••• • -· K. · Be -R-011, 24x48. Tahitian Cove, 857·0910 (OQ>UKZI for Sec'y w/good typing TocJiller on ECE HARBOR AREA SHIH TZU pups, AKC. mg Sile auty est $375 67J.62Zl 3 limes. Xlnt rood S225 '81Sunfish.14' Xlnt cond
skills. lite SH & gen of· & exp. w~:f;e':'s. FT APPLIANCE SERVICE S250and up Cash only. Mattress $150 548-3164 --·-. evs 673-4070 Great Xmas gift S800.
fice exper. Salary open Susan, 64().8820N B We buy used appliances ---63J-9U ___ aft 7PM. Save recreauooaJ fuel 1 Bubble Pool Enclosure. _Cost 130067J.6283
Call Dee, 644-1865. TE.ACHY -We sell recood., guar. Sib. Husky pups, AKC. SURPLUS FURN ~~:l~.r ~=il~~· 1~0% 28x48, xlnt. S"ISO/oHer. 12. BOOMERANG, trade
SECRETARY n e e d e d E o r I Y appliances. ~3077 xlnt markings, SUIS. Pvt Entry ta~~ Tall ta mph, ;250. 64<Mi0'11 673·6336 642-9666 for Video tape recorder.
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
Executive secretary to childhood. ~lementary llUY 1>.PPtJA)ifcES party, S36-348S. ble lamps S2S ~a. Ma~ Bronze Plate Glass Mir Stor., Rnt•wl, or sell for .962-2667
General mgr. of reson credential or ch1ld de· Les 957·8133 Basseu Hound, 12 weeks. Stereo console SlSO. ror, Sl2S 8ftX12ft. lar io95 'AITHB WANTED ~Ford Sedan Deluxe, ~otel. Lovely surround velopment ""rm1t 3. R r g S""S w her AKC !leg $200. Good Cash only 642-3736 Sat 642·0239 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ings. busy office, varied .. ~ e n · '" as · with J(jds.67S.S897 only ----LOSING LEASE. quit CAL. 20 concours trophy winner.
2000 HARBOR BLVD
COSTAM!SA 642 0010 ------
d XI t . & 41hrs.aday.Schoolage dryer gas range _. Power mower. 4 blade. l1Dgbus1n· -·.sel'··gout ·759.9219 759-1945 ground up restoration. uties · n typing childcare center Call d. h ' h s · BEAGLES AKC $200 J ... ood d S7 ......, w• shorthand required SSZ..5618. is was er 125 ea. 080 2 couch 5 chair classics aco<Don.g con . S ALL supplies and fix 20 ft Day Crwser sail $12,500.851-6226.
Reply to· Surf & Sand 646-5848 12 wks All shots S200 1400 S.E. Bristol. f.!!m Caslt 6'5-0490 lures including. boat. Complete except 1958 220S. xlnt cond .•
Hotel Laguna Beach TELEPHONES HOT OFFER I ~91SS Rodeway Inn. Sat am Washer I dryer s1:;o pr Display cases, wailing for mast Make orrer s12.soo or best orrer between 9-5 Mon·Fn Telephone interviewers O SH• onl Cherry tbl/6 chrs $150 room chairs. Beauty uc 1121 900-061Sor675·$911
!714) 497·™ · wanted. Hourly waee & C LD CA ! AKC AFGHAN Beaut. glass inlaid coffee ~olQrTV~..Jl.54_ Sa•n . hairdryers and ,,.,,. 1951 MG TD. new leather
Wr'll Buy
Or '1"11
Y 01.rr Cit Gn
Import On
Con\lqnmC'nf'''
Coll Our
U\!'d Car
Monaqc-r
TODAY "
83 I ·2040 49~ 1949
Saddltbac~ 9,,,...,
M1u1o n Y1f'fO
WEPAt
TOP DOLLAR
FORUSEDC~S
ALAM MACM4(>N
POKTIAC/~RU
2480 Jl1ll'bor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
549-4300 549-1457
PORSCHES
WANTED Allow us the opportunity
to (Onsider the purchase
or trade·ID of your clean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today!
13&)111illl» 8N<I
G•'den G10~ -.. ~DD
WEMHD
YOUR EXOTIC
&HmSHCAIS
3100W Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
642-~
WANTED!
•*SECRET AllES •
R.E Mkt. exp. Sht 80d1c·
taphone. spell. compose.
grow with a great sue
cessful group on the
water SIS,000 Exp
Consultant Ours
bonus Evenings only. Get S2S for your opera· HOUNDS & end tables, Med1t StOftes Tidlets s50 eo. hydra~ll1c c~rs.1 m1r· 1oat0!;.~_ips/ 9070 upho.1. new top, good
Call Norm,963-8919 ble second refrigerator. 3 ADORABLE 1 week ~S0.673-4743 851..()(28 rors,s eves Pants _.. running. $7500. WKdys, L•ft•mh•TJ•• TYPIST It's costuig you up ~ old puppies Brand new sofa and love -Also, make-up, shampoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 759·1961 Evs 646--0679 ri
W k HOM E $144 o~ more a year in 675-I059 seat. green/wheat, ac Binks Airless Sprayer and ha1rproduct.s WANTED Slip for :;o· • '
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos Ca ll us
or at typing electric bills Donate cent pillows. Beautiful Must be run w IHP Call631·97S4or sailboat. Newport For Sale or Lse 1952
manuscripts for small you r operating second Free to YOll 1045 Pd Sl700 asking S8SO ~r~d. S_!50 631-6072 afler6,898-6809 Beach. 531-0146. M e r cedes Benz
publisher. 3 needed for refrigerator to one or the ••••••••••••••••••••••• 080 Grandfather Clock. ptly TV Radio. Sbp sailboats 22•.27• elec Cabriolet 220 Convert•· "" .. ...,II•&
steady work charities listed below, l nttd a yard' I'm 3, like 552·4081 assembled, .. Emperor HIFf. Stweo 1091 & water on dock Free ble. fully restored. xlnt "'.0;70~:-;:o.•o?
L11 Reinders Agy Inc.
4020 Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport/ 833-8190/ Free
___ 8J2.64~ get a receipt. -and le.ids. do tncks & mind Stereo 8 fl cab. Al cood. Kit" S~~73~9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• prk'g. Everything 1st ~~~~) c:~~ P~~elab•~~ .!!!""""~~====~ TYPIST Southern California good. rm mostly Spr· SlSO. 48" round table (no Ford Shell Top$100. King Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr class. best in Nwpt 6PM / knds.89 0566 a TO• ftall ... f N. B. electrical engineer Edison will pay you S2S. ingerSpaniel. 552·0052 chrsl SSO. Bdrm set $150. Coffee & wrnty Free dehvery 673·8711 lill9 P.M w __ l ·. p UUM
in g r i rm H eavy Your donation is tax de· Male neutered cat shots. __ 842-~ end tables SSO each $148 646-1786 BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT J.um.b-0 14" wheels for D...i.I
Security Personnel 40 hr
week. S4.S01hr Phone
675·6101 bet'4·een 8 4,
_Mon·Fn.
technical typing Gram· ductible. Free pickup by about l year lo~eable Re r r 1 g er at or $4 00 18 tn Philco Color TV NPT BCH 23' 25' 28' 33-34 Ford. centers & f 41U
mar & Spellmg skills a the charily This special 642.()892 aft 2 ~ Teak din1ng1conference 675.9735. Nice __ .. Sl35 32. & 34• · · • hub caps rechromed, s For Your Car" fr n....-be -----table . chairs $450 '-vuu • CorSSOO Jerr 673-2549 must. Min 80 wpm 0 er expires ~.,m r F ..... 1050 I d s I r 67 .. 8193 642·46449-SPM · · -· -JOHHSOHliSOH 18. 1981 -• INYW'• Rossignol sk1is Burt bin· ns1 e a e. U>t.s o items .,. -WL.... Dri 9550 Other duties include fil. ....................... dings igs. SJJ.2038 at best reas offer All New GE big screen T V Loaded 32' Sprtlshr. W Ix 4 -•I "" LiRc• t4c1 CSJ
SEC'Y, LEGAL
Estab. Npt Center law
firm needs expe.r legal
secrtlary wlgood typ.
ing. It. phones & general Children's Hospital * * I BUY * * NEV ER USED Glass good sturr. 536-7154. 1r no Paid SJ,400. Must sell Int mooring. S39.500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2626 Harbor Blvd' office. Salary com· ro Co t di ~ Sof & ans .. keepca1ling. "'800.orB/0~6836 ~-8574 '71L_.niiMr CostaMesa 540.5630 mensurate Wllh exper 0 range un Y Good used Furniture & top nette . .....,. a -~ $4600 5411 04 Good company benerlts 1714> m -1242 Appliances OR 1 will loveseat S300. Queen STORE COUNTER New Color TV. 17"' 2 wks loots, Speed & 497·5100, ·7 4 _
Call546·999S._ sellorSELLCorYou bdrm $540. Bunks $200. 72"x30 ". w c a s h old Remote control. Sid 9010Tn1cb 9560
ing, dictaphone & TYP I ST / RECEP ·
shorthand skills Real TIONIST P.R & fund de· Estate btJgation w em v e I o p m en t d e pt
phasis on land use la'4 Personable. brganized
Salary compet1t1ve self.starter. Vaned
640.6960. r e s p o n s 1 b 1 l 1 t 1 es
SEC'Y /UCEPT
Entry.level position m a
fast growing. exciting
advertising agency in
Irvine. Great potential
for the right person Ex·
t'ellenl typing & or
ganizat1onal skills re· quired Please call
_!t a!!ID'n. (7141833·3960.
SS /6Swpm. Excell.
benefits & oppty. to ad-
vance. Santa_ Ana area.
546-5.7~60~-----
V ETERINA RY
H~PITAL
Kennel work & general
assis tance. full·llme
Mon-Sat. 6 hrs Mm age
18 Ener~eta c non
smoker, lrvm~. 552· 1513 •aily Pilot · .... ······· : · · · .... :
. .
Sales
Trainee
For District Manager
This highly s1,1t'cessful local. newsJ>Bper has an opening for a trainee in the circulation department. Basic skills
will entail superv1s1on or 10 to 14 year old boy anil girl hom.e. deli.very carriers. Areas of superv15100 will be
delivery, collections and sales. Selet'led applicant will receive liberal
starting salary. regul~~ly scheduled
raises. bonus opportumlles and many fringe benefits such as company paid
dental and health plan, group hfe
Insurance. vacation and sick leave. Com(>any vehicle is furnished during
workmg hours. Applicants must be over 18, have a
good driving record and be neat
appearing. Hours are generally 11 AM to 9 PM. Monday lhru Friday. Some overtime is available. If you are qualifitd and interested in learning the circulation business
cont.act fbe Daily Pilot at 3l> W. Bay, Costa Mesa before 10:30 AM or after 2
PM daily. Ask for Don Williams or Ken Goddard
Aeld Sales Supe~
Limited opening• available In the1
Orange Coast area. for aelf·moUvaled .
career oriented lndlv•dual who tan
work 'With Field Sales People. Train,
motivate and get results. Station
wagon or van nettssary. Ex~aJ
urnlngs, plus Job rtlated benefits availal>le for the rlfht people. If )'C)U
(ID produce reaulta. "°'just lalll about ~1 call: 960-0S!H for Interview. AM for
111r. Chanre.
l;£
Cow Meta.CA
. \ fqtd ~(ri..,,· .:
_., ....... ,, .. , ............... , ........... , .. •
St Vincent de Paul MASTERS AUCTION Mattress/box springs· draw~. 846·2529 Paid SS25. sell $425. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
1714) 633-9190 twn $80, full SOO. Queen '67 Chrysler Imperial. _193·5237 ·79 Jet ski. good cond 13 Ranchero. xlnt cond., 646-8686, 133-9625 $130. MORE'! 776-0901 SJOO OBO. 3 Meru. 10 Gi rard Stereo. Harmon SISOO with shell. $2100 Call
TbeSaJvauon Army I IUY FUIMITURE Dresser. Sfl tall, solid spds. SSO Ea Girls 3spd. Kardon Mdl wttumtable 96&-Z7!12 eves 631·6480 ask for
1714>547®1 Les 957·8133 oak. while, $45 S2S. Color TV's. SS.SIOO + Webcor 3 way spkr loclh. Storogit 9090 Brian.
Nearly new Caloric dis· KING INNERSPRING 754·7166 8/W TV, SS.00. Kitch filS200.541HS13 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18 GMC Sierra ~. ton S
hwasber, bit-In SSO. EXTRA nRMmanress Maple dining !able tble & Chairs. s5.o. 25" t'olor Iv w/solld spd. 80,000 mi. $3400 646·l896 a1t 5PM set, never used. worth nomar top w/6 captain Fridge, SS.00. Port Dis· walnut cabinet. needs DRY SJnDlf'( 1157-0871,846-3242
Maytag Washer & Ken· $530. sacr. $248 del. chairs S2SO. 9 drawer h/wash 125. Much more. some work . S 199. UllM m ~.T pkup70Chevy
more Heavy Duly Never used queen sz. dresserw/mirrorS95,4' 216\.\ Broadway CM 831·9474 Monthly boat & R.V (1)1Tpkup.74GMC
Dryer. both electrlc · worth S399, cash only glass show case $25. nr 645·6170. loats Ii · storage for any me. 24 (I) ;.T Van, 73GMC,
S12Sforboth.494-7852. $218 del. Usually home. newSearswatersoflner Sofa. $140: Water btd M.w hr security , rree all have pwr, air.
16 cu. ft upright energy 754-7350 S95. Samps«1ite luggage $120. coffee table $20, Eq.iptMftt launching & washing loaded
saver White West-MUSTSB.L fullsetS25,antqSonora dinrmchairsS20 MISC. ••••••••••••••••••9••0•1•0• privileges. Newport CaUTru.Top.6469328
1oghouse. I yr old. record playerwtrecords 551·8038 551·8098 Dunes. lUl Back Bay 7:30-.i.__Monlhru Fri
848-4497 asldorSue Mahogany £?bl. Bed S 1 so 646 1455 361 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr. Newport Beach. V•s 9570 . w/maltress. Night stand R Pl CM Magnificent 6 ft MODEL Fishing chair, 19' outng 644_0510 0 Keere & Memlt bltn & dresser to match. Like a team · · S H 1 P On I Y S 8 O 0 ' gers, rod holders. nush "'11111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111-~ •• ••••••••••••••••••••• oven & range top. xtnt new Must see to ap· Smked glass tble, 4 cane 640-8688 mount & adj deck -= Ford 1 T •74· Pis, p/b.
cond.$200.!157-8212 preclate. Only $1000 or back chairs $325. 2 bar 3Pc Babyline bdrm set· mount. S250 Jerry auto. VS. Good cond
Refrigerator Hot point. best o fr er Mari a stools S2S ea after 3. crib + matlress. chang· 673-2549 Tr.sportafioet S21SO 644·9676 aft 6.
d 673 1388 . bl d d - -••••••••••••••••••••••• side by si e. copper 6 31 . 7 7 97 a ft 6 PM · mg l · resser. goo Seagull. 4 hp, long shaft. c--~ ....... / A.to Le-i-9510
lone. xlnl cond S250. weekdays. anytime NaugahydeSofaS75. Xlnt cond $125.968-2504 new, never ustd. $700 ·~· .. -9120 ••••••••;~••••••••••
645·5165 weekends. If no answer cond. 2 Twn beds & 1 dbl White's Metal Detector Jerry 673-2549 For Sale or Lse 19<2 . bed $35 673-3834 -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ., Upright dbl dr fridge, please keep lryuig. ea. $150. Golf cart. clubs S4S loah Marilf 10.,., Camper Four Star M e r c e d e s 8 e n .i
J&S. New Sea.rs. under Sora. love seat. chair. ot· Loll Bed Comp w/mat· 0 i Is. matt • m 1sc Eq.1,....... 9030 w/refrigerator & stove Cabriolet 220 Convert1·
warranty, small oHice toman, coffee table set tress. ladder, guard rail. 631·6249 ••••••••••••••••••••••• p 0 rt .a .pot 1 y . A 11 ble. rully restored, xl~l
size fridge, SlOO . 54&-8973 St30. Mbuli...o. ZHP "Seagull" Ol. Bd Butane. Queen site bed. cond. Call Paul Oesabns
00.6.373 --Maple rock 9·dtawer 963-SMS WCMted 8081 mtr. w/stand. spare Sleeps 6. In excellent (714) 963-5505 & aft
Kenmore washer/dryer, chest $135. Pecan chest Fabric Sofa & Loveseat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tank & parts. 646·4113 condition. $900 Call 6PM/wknds891 ·0566
elec .. xlnl cond. 3 yrs of drawers Sl50. Stereo tan background. floral Wanted The Letter "A'" eves/wknds.$345. between lOam·Spm Alltos W..tecl 9590
old, $30()/pr. 67~5450 2·spkrs, cass. & IHrk. print w/oranges browns For the Pepsi Challenge Canoe, 15· "Alumacran.. 631·7657 ..................... ..
20 cu rt side by slde F/F newSlS0.963-4090 & greens. Sl25. Good Game (Under the Caps rare dbl ended sq. stem
Frigidaire Rdrig Cop-Beaut. wood furn : dr set cond. Will deliver local Of Soft Drinks) Will pay 4 Ot Bd mlr S33S
pertone. $22S. 642·5671 $400. beds $200, chajrs & ly 831-6259 SlOO lo the person who 646-4113
Whirlpool washer and lamps 15·$20. 640-1059 8 AB Y Furn 1 t-0 re . finds one.4gJ.5372 Ev-in-r-ud_e_•_h_rs_p_w_r-08
a· cabover t'amper.
SQl5.
846·3915 after Spm
Motoriwd Illies 91 .. 0 dryer. installed and 2 Belmont Barber Chairs. Aquarium, Twin beds, Malcal Runs great. $400
operatinanowSBSea 4 4"x30" Mirrors wit.. Misc howiehold furn. lwtlru•11ls 1013 ".c5916 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ " uo au7 .,..,. 1980 Batavus moped, xlnt 548-7071 wood frames, best offer. ....., . ...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond S300.
Refrig. very clean, auto 645-2972. Ciorogt S9t 1055 Bundy clarin~t used I • 'oww 9040 ?6G-8506
defrostSlSO Rome or ortlce-beaut ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 1195· Chord organ Pu ch Moped. MK 2 893-9080 cartner's .... k. walnut Qn sofa bed, loose pillows. lSO. ~S.89:11. d ue> v mo el, turn signals, Older Refrtg dbl dr S6S url hi·"'-•. matchin° new S3SO. 2 g:m living • !TO CLARINET ·I L I
Runs good.' New ofc 9~ boolcca.:Ti Jthr chairs~ chairs $25. Mataofi dbl XJnt student inslnlment H~/OBO.° !TI4l~l •
ref rig, undr wmty SlOO. SSM564: 644-5642. bed sle $125. Antq. adies IZ. 968-56118 r---~----1 Vesta Ciao. Runs well
645-6373 Wrou•hl. iroo din set. 4 Oak desk SIU. Anlq. whl Gibson Elec Guitar. old, ., wicker rocker sso. all orig w/ca•e. S300 Sl2S. ae.torrer Ref rig. frost free , very cbrs·tble a " w/glass lop -~ """ 0 645-7836 clean, works fine. $250. $275. 3 shelf curio. gold """"4""" 080 Afts 55&-1134
5411-8513 or S4M48S decorative top $75. Lazy Office, ...... &
Washer, clean, works Boy Recliner xlnt cond. QUEEN.SIZE ~..... IOIS
good S9S. 548·8513 or $75.646-2& SLEEPER ....................... ---------548-i48S Goldtone Floral Sofa L couch Is matching love NCR Cuh re&ister. 10 .. .. Xl seat. Black & white yra. Xlnt cond. comp Freeier, older upgright. shaped. US~ · nt fabric w/chromt trim. urviced 1-81. S200
clean. w<rts ioocs. ns cond. s5oo. 968•7559• Great coodltion. 1325 759·l~eves.
S48·8Sl3or54f.448S 7S2·13Z3 set Call ~ eves
Refrlg. rrott ftte, work& New full size Bed, Mat· and weekend. • Copy machines for Sale.
good. $2(11. S4U513 or trea1 • Bou~gs. $60. · Xlnt cond. •,
548·4485 750-5832 an~~ Jtwtfry 1070 85S-9G8, 788-1092
GE Oiahwubers from Returnln& to Michigan ••••••••• .............. P• 1087
'Condo convmlonl. SSO mutt tell Uvina room L27ctPINKSA.PPHlRE, ••••••••••••••••••••n•
each. Mah 0 ff er. f11miturd1 bed. Will sell apprai1ed 11 over $4000 Cocbloo umbrella male
179-1255 11 sroup/aeparately, _.11 tell ror an1y llOO' with case. Loves pet·
"
llNll9I"• ~ .. IOlS UOO obo. 760·3849 • tln1. '700 or best oiler. " If .mtlme. CdM. ·1231 ~
• ...................... Queen bed • Frame '8$. Da-.1 FemaJe Alblno Coaalie1.
HDWOOOLATHI dreuer nl1btstand • 2 ct Sll,000 reta I ap· w/S' black wrouaht iron 50·f ' boud1/bundle. mirror ... lturdy boot praiul, wUI 1tll for ca&e1 fl50.831MZ51
JU/"'odle·'*'•Jlm uae $20. aU11c. Items M.000. da UJ..JliOO, ev Coch tlel, 2--y=r ..... ol_d_M_
Loolblf for a lliome ol 1 .... C«au del Mar. •M80h@lor5teff. w/lr1 ti aml ca1t. 115.
100I' OWll? YIRl'D Bid t • a r q u a we d • MMW!!!!/wbda
•Alf Jiiamm ~ I _pc IY. rm-. ne '!'!i n., . .JSJCT. Wblte pld. ii ah ="' 1bop,1na for 1al1 111 Cl...._,,.. am or Ill.a olftr. w.u -obo. 117.-0 after eaaier UM Dal· ........ ... · '1 Piiot ~. .~.......,,..~ ......... ...._----
WE PAY TOP 001.LAR
ror top used cars
foreign. domesllcs or
classics. If your car 1s
extra clean. see us
FIRST !
,,, .. o....,.c.-,
292S Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
-2
WllUY
CLEAHCilS
AMDTIUCICS
COHHH.L
CHEVROlU
'\. ..... 11 ,r lo I
541> 1 ;oc
W•l'!l, OVEK ••1oo11· For Your Good
VW, Porsche or AIMll
VW ·PORSCHE-AUDI
445 E. CoastHlway
at Bayside Drl\tc
Newport Beach 673-0900
Premium prices
paid for any used tar
<foreign ordomtlfili~I
In good condition ..
See Us Firsll
SOUTH COAST
Dodge
.!888 lli1 rb111 Hhd
l'o~t a :\h·i; 1 ~o 0:130
WEIUY
USEDCARS&TRUCKS
COME IN OR
CALL FOR ·
FttH APPUISAL
Cormier·DeUllo CHMOUT
18211 BEACH BLVf>.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
147-6ot7or
549-lll.L__
AMtot, IMforted • •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ci1•rll '701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·a1 Delorun, ~pd. •blk
int, lo ml. Ut,ooo.
&75·11818.
IMW I '112 ...•............• , .....
,
OIAMCH
llAllTlfUU!
'MPonclwtU
• • Mech Perltcl • • ~
4t7-411t
COl»CTY-S '61 Porsche 356. good UCLUSIVE cond. sell or trade for MA SERA Tl late model import. best
DEALBSHIP ~ 83~
We'll deliver anywhere '78 300 CD diesel cpe '57 Speeckht' in the world! Si Iver I b I u e w 1 re Xlnt Body. M01tly orig IEACH IWOITS wheels, aunroor xlra RWll Well Nice Car 5th
848 Dove Street tanll cassette. 497-649' car in a 5 car family
G. 752-0tOO '81300 SD Metallic arey. '...!·9$5=-*2=---
u169 Harbor Blvd. sunroof, grey tea in· 10 Porsche 911 E wh1te1
••••••••••••••••••••••• terior. 900 mi Full war· black, am/fm cassette.
/1 00 ,~ .. , •• ""''
I I°"'' \lo,t C,4l) • lj(.)
ltHc.dC..
white. red lntenor. wire
wheels, stereo cassette,
COMMELL
CHEVROLET
,,. H 1' • I
••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l4Gnuda S1IOO ~tm.._ 646-4848
"'° ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• Mtrt . MONTECO. 4
good lop SJCn>Trade for OW.moll• t772 jewelry, boat. car ! •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-~ '75 STA.ltFllE
":'"~ SU-1200
#I YOLYODEAUI
IN ORANGE COUNTY•
URLEll<E
YOlVO
'77 Seville An aJI black '76Cbevy<lleveUe $2000___ 6'2-9386
beauty with real chrome SlSOO. Good t'Olldition! '77 OLDS Cul Sup. ai r
wire wheels, $79SO 646-3423 all.6PM MUST SELL. xlnt cond JeIT1. ~J.2549 _ _ • --=----00 OB0642-2342 aft S
'63 Cad Sedan, 74,000 Clwy.a.r tt25 Transportation car gd
m1 new paint runs gd ••••• •••••••••••••••••• · R XJnt $600 $700 OBO 646-Wa '71CHR~LER300 I !~ ~~ Ull5 ----87 OOOnu needs top .,.........,...
L973 Cad cpe de Ville 1 · 641.16& aft. 6 Pi1tfo tt57
owner, rWlY equlp~d. '68 Wa gon. l owner Xlllt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sll!SO OBQ494.o873 ev Mech cond. Good tires 12 Pinto Hatchback, gd
ChHrolet tf20 Trlr It 644-HW cond Ong owner Sky
--------
SN..u-sER\4CE4.fASING VISITYOUI ._. __ ~1._"!170 ranly. $36,<m or offer runsgood.$6450 20IW. tll.SAHTAANA _......._. f740 pp BSl-0232 '79 Bug convert All •14~171 OIAMGI COAST ....................... 67J.JIX59, 752-!02.5 ,77 Pors~ 9115. met:" White 15.<mmi Perfect
1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
646-9303 540-9467 ••• •••••••••••••••••••• -blue $900 OBO 7~0460 '6llll!lplrial C:0..Y aft 6 PM
Ill II Must see-all orig-no ..,._ ........ H OHD .& -cond 538:.Sl'B eves O E09JNDAY A •Ml,,,.....• •79 300D, all extras, silver , pwr sunroof.
WeMeetorBeat HEAD~AITEIS 9MCIW.a•• cassette, extra tank,. am l fm cass. a c , '71 Squareback, ~unroof. AltY BanarldeDeal TO •y1t1 lo•MW sunroof, sheepsk1ni1. $15,950 PP.~ rack + + + Super car
eo.i.eSeeusToday" " ••• 44,000 miles, mint cond. 1974 911 Targa. white. re· to good home only Sl!HlO
'68 VW BUS Must sell 1m
mediately 12400 080
6421821
'78 264 GL. 361< mile:.. ext
wrnty avail Beau ron!l
PIP 552-7299 ,, & . . UNIVERSITY eom:re'~i Im· Sl8,900. Days 525-1700, built. excellent car Ask-§7HL27_bef Ji>m
SALES6SERVICE ports Direct lease and 60 Eves 615-KJS ing Sl4,500 '78 "Champagne Edi
OU>SMOllU mos sensible pymt s MG 9742 S44.Ql83da, ~ while \'W Com t Autos, Uwd Hot4DA D 1 a I 2 1 3 0 r ....................... 642-9885 eves, wknds _ 4~~· l.5J6 ...................... .
l,ADD' 9 ACI GMC TIUCIS 714/M ERCEDFS is 213 '71 914 Porsche, AM t FM '76 VW Rabbit good cond lulck 99 f'O
•*CLASSIC!•• '64 1MPALA
Original Owner
HODYNEVER
DAMAGED
$1100
Runs fantasl1t'''
497-4119
IMW 2850 Harbor Blvd. or 714/637·2333 stereo cass. great cond 30 mpg Must sell $2650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21GM~Pkwy. COSTA MFSA $3500 645-8010 aft-will consider trade '80 Buick <.:entur) LTD. 1111111 u V~jo I 673 5372. 675-7783 d d • 40-9640 SELLINGYOURMB! IMMACULATE!! ~v_s__ ~ 4 r. 6 cyl. loa ed, 17.34S A(~~~~· '78 Honda Civic, new WErAY '6t MKGT 6CY ·79 911SC Cpe, loaded, as-1975 YW IUS m1, $7400 <7141631 <noo
brakes, Michelins, T"•-• "'•SS sume 'lease. ~77/mo. 24 lowm1leage,origowner. ·74 Bu1('k Opel 1900 run~ ·77 El Camino classic all
131·1040 4t5-494t Clint, warr. motor over· C lt""'"J ~Ba MlnsihdeP&rrfoectut mos left. S1500 down am fm stereo. xlnt cond xlnl . good gas mileaiee xtras 12.BOOorbestoffer. CloledSundays a ac.. con • • ec e • • 673-lSBS, 686-S280 ssooo S59 ~12 Sl,300 675 5861. Newpon ~-6381 ul. 760-8160CdM. Jiu~·-....-..$ S3Cn> · · _
r.-j 9715 "'-"' '77 Targa Blkon Blk Im Bch '78 Monte Carlo. xlnt _...,... t730 IMPOITS 497-4119 mac 50 K Mi S17.500 SCIRROCO d f II I ded I ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1301Qual1Sl 1979 excellent cond Cadilac 9915 t'On · u Y oa · 0 mi.
'14 Capri, aLComallc, 6 '11 XJ6. Needs minor NEWPORT BEACH OBO. 673~ am fm tape deck AC + ••••••••••••••••••••••• be,\il offer l!J3..760t
cyl. air cond. $1.500. CaU body wort. SJCn>OBO 83J.9300 e...tt 9755 extras ~ORO Russ '69 Coupe de Ville 2 dr ~ Chev Mahbu xlnt
9'1t-2514. -673-1180 •••••••••••••••••••••••1 Park er 788 08HO o r runs great $650 OHO cond AM FM radio. w.. t7JO le 9736 '79 240-D, sunrool. auto PMpOt 9741 1~ R~na~ ;;: Go~~s I . 494 4948_ 645·4174 $900 G42-li084-"-
•••••••••.............. ....................... trans, air, stereo, ivory ....................... n .!'rk .-.J'!4s.4741 11'2 Super Beetle. xtrn 1979 Cad cp de Ville Lan '17 290 z 2+2. AC lo mi '19 Beta Sedan. like new, • bamboo. 3S,OOO ml. ;s Peugeot. Sold new 1n ..!.t\B.:.,' 0 • !! · clean. m NJ<1 out. new dau top. wire whls. lea. 8 1950 Chev Sl<mor best of-
ma( whls, Al.I orig lo ml, loaded SS,595. Im m a c . SI 7 . 5 O o '76. S2200or beslofr Call Find wh.at you want in I tires. brks. ball etc S2600 track, teal green 31.000 fer Runs good aft S
9'0-?JlO 645-9447 • 851-6Z?6. 557.9359 na1lv P1lnt <'h~.;~'''"'1~ PP l\4.~.9sro m1 Xlnl S8lm 494-4881 556-3734
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
• • • • A TUS CHRYSL&-PL YMOUTH N.EWPOIT DATSUN IOI LONGPRE rOHTIAC
"'° rust-all opt.ions • .,_. ~ ..•••............•••...
----'50 DELUXE reblt eng
Con.th ttl2 fml end. generator, new
••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. battery & brakes,
Sam says "drive a httle, runs xlnt S2.SOO or 8/0
save a lot," on new 81 548~9268~--
Corvetles eqwpped Wllh rCMlfioc f96§
4 speed or automatic •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• transmission '68 GTO, cherry cond
430577 RED CLEAN FAST CAR
430754 WHITE s 695 101673SILVER 1
10302'7 BEIC F. 493-94~11--t0380'l BRONZE '70 Pont iac Tempest.
mech sowld, needs tires
..2!1.!J_$600 ~14 OeSANFIS
CHEVROLET
'78 Sunbird, 26,000 m1.
like new. Call Sue,
-8Sl·3882/613·7081
401 S. El Camino Real '76 Grand Pnx Loaded
San Clemente Snrf Beautiful must see
831 .Q.580 __ 49H500 ~ OBO. 64>12'3
Co"ette 1970 1970 Fireblrd, new paint.
White. air, cruise, Xlnt stereo. Good tran.sporta·
cond. 19,<m mi Sl0,200 lion car Body in xlnl
Week days only cond 12100 7SO-Sl42 art
17141994-0500 4PM
COSTA MESA DATSUN 2129 Harbor Blvd,, Costa Mesa. Tel. 546-1934. 3 blocks
tc>Uth of San Diego Freeway otf,Harbor Blvd. Complete
rbody shop. Sales. Service. Parts. Service Dept. open
888 Dove Street, Newport BNch. Tel. 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind
V1ct0<ia Station. Sales, Service. Leasing & Parts Fleet
discounts to the public.
13600 Beach Blvd. Westminster. Tel 892-&>51 . Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes,
Service. Parts
2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel 540-6410 Serving
Orange County for 16 years 1 Mile So 405
Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M to 5:30 PM. and 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday . • IEACM IMPOITS
848 OoY8 Street, Newport Beech. Tel. 752-0900. Call us.
we're the specialists for Alfa Romeo, Peugeot & Saab
•• THIODOREROllMSFOltD
Modern sales, service. parta, body. pelnt & tire depts.
competitive rates on lease & daily rentals. 2060 Harb0<
BMf .. Costa Mua. 642-001 o or ~11.
• JOHNSON & SOM UHCOLM MllCUltY
2926 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. ~5630. 57 Years
of friendly family service -Orange County's oldest Lin··
COin-Mercury dealership.
SOUTH COAST DOOGI H8I Harbor Blvd .. Cotta M .... Tel 5"40-0330. RV Mrvlce'
epeclallatt, cuatom van conviaralooa.
MIWPOIT N'OITS
3100 W. Coaat Highway, Newport Beach. Ttl.
8411405/540-1784. The Ftrr .. Haedguartrtrt.
• HAIRS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 546-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dealer. Sales. Service. Leas·
Ing .
G>
DAVID J. rttLLIPS IUIC«-POMTIAC-MA.ZDA
Sales • Servioe • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hiiis 837-2400
• llLL MAXEY TOYOTA USID CARS
19202 BHch Blvd .. H untlngton BHch. 962·0829.
Outttandlng H lectlon of used cars for i mmediate
delivery. And wtllle on Beach Blvd .• stop by our new car
facility up the street.
• ALAM MAGMOM POMnAC-SUIARU
2.480 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mela. Tel. ~&-4300. Sales ..
Sriloe, Leatlng. ~'Mr. Goodwrenoh."
• HOUSI °' IWOUS
MllC-•11 ..................
e.2 Mtnchester Bl'id .. Buena P...-(on Santa Ana
FfMWay). Take Beaeh Bllld. Offramp -aharp right on
Menchetter.
DIAL ME .. -CEOES (213 or 114) 837·2333
UNIVERSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9640 I Mtle
South 405 Freeway Sales. service. parts & leasing
• SANTA AHADATSUH
2001 E I 7lh Street. Sar1ta Ana. Tel 558-7811 Your•
Orrgmal Dedicated Datsun Dealer.
0 MIRACLE MAZDA
We've movedl Our new location Is 1425 Baker Street.
Costa Mesa. Tel. 545-3334. Stop by & visit our brand new
ahOwroom and see why we're the #1 Mazda dealer In
Southern Caltfornla. Sales. Service. Pans and Leasing.
ALLEN·OLDSMOllLl-CADILUC
SUIARU·GMC ftUCICS
San Diego Fwy. at Avery Exit on Ca.mlno Capistrano In
Laguna Niguel. Tel. 831·080Ql49S-0800
• SAM DI SAMTIS CHIVaOUT
401 S. El Camino AMI. s..i Clemente
Sales, Servi.:., LMalng And Part•
Orange County'• NEWEST Chevrolet dealer; "Growing
Your Way." Exit El CamJno Off"f'amp.
831-0580 492.UOO
SUNSET FORD, INC.
(Home of Wittie the Whale). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd ..
Westminster TeL 636·4010
FRAMK PROTO UHCOLK-MEACURY
Service and Parts Departr;nent always open 7 days a
. week 7:30 A.M to 6:30 P.M. 848-7739
0 COMMllL CHIVIOUT
.2828 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. CNer 20 years serving
Orange Countyl Sales. lealng, a.vice. Call 546-1200:
apeclal parts line; 546·9400: body ahop line: 754-0400.
• CHICIC IVHSOH POISCHl-AUDl-VW
415 E. Coast Hwy .. Newport Beach. 87¥>900. The only
dealership In Orange County V!Ath theM thrM great
l'nMH under one roofl
• lOY CAAVIA ltOU.S IOYCNMW
1540 Jambor" Road. Newport BMch. ~ Sii•,
Service, Part• And Leaalng
,.
•
IUlll CUil
,...~ '"l,:Ji\' I( '' Ut .. .,.
~ ...... ,.....,ClllrMIWT
County campgrounds are the Last stop for Carol and Brad Ammons after ev1ctwn from apartment m
Fullerton They are nut alone 111 /acmg housing problems
AW ACS hearin
R eagan nixes joint owne rship with Saudi Arabia
WASHINGTON !AP> -Presi-
dent Reagan, vowing to do
nothing lo infringe on Saudi
Arabia's sovereignty, says the
United States has no intention of
s haring ownership of AWACS
radar planes with the Arab
kingdom to gel the sale through
Congress.
And Reagan. accusing oppo-
nents of the deal of waging a
propaganda campaign, says he
hasn't "reall y gone to bat yet."
l'he presuient was stepping up
his batlJe today, as hearings re-
sumed on Capitol Hill.
He called leading foreign
policy figures from previous ad-
ministrations to the White House
for a luncheon and Rose Garden
reception today to demonstrate.
he said Sunday, "how many peo-
ple of varying political back-
grounds and views are in
wholehearted support of the
AWACS sale."
The guest list included four
former defense secretaries
Harold Brown , Elliott
Richardson, Melvin Laird and
Baby horn ·in auto
Inmate gives birth in patrol car
Whe n Gilli Ness inger, a
female inmate at Orange County
Jail. said she was going to have
a baby, sheriff's department dep·
~ties dutifully summoned an
ambulance to take her to the UC
Irvine Medi cal Center in
Orange.
But doctors who examined the
24·year-old Cypress woman said
s he was experiencing false labor
and relesased her to be returned
to the Jail via a sheriff's patrol
car.
No sooner had the vehicle
pulled into a security yard near
(he jail booking area than Ms.
Nesslnger once again went into
labor. A registered nurse on du-
ly was summoned and Ms. Ness-
inger, who is awaiting trial on
grand theft charges, gave birth
to a baby boy.
"We didn't have any scales. so
we don't know how much he
weighed." s heriff's Lt. Wyatt
llarl said today. The birth oc-
curred early Saturday morning.
Britons rap Carson
'England de but turns sour
LONDON (A P l -British
te l evision critics were not
amused by Johnny Carson's
weekend debut on England's
commercial network.
• · 1 was eager to see what
made a man worth $3 million a
year," Dennis Hackett wrote in
the Times of London. "Whatever
it was. it was not s howing ,
though he obviously is tremen·
dously satisfied with himself. It
is not even as if we could blame
this production on damage suf-
fered by being bounced off a
satellite.··
Inde pe ndent Television
launched a 13-week series of
once-a-week Carson broadcasts
on four of its 13 stations Satur·
day evening with a tape of his
19th anniversary s how.
Herbert Kretzmer of the Daily
Mail reckoned Carson lost the
opening bout with Britain's top-
rated talk-show host, Michael
Parkinson, whose program ran
earlier in the evening on the
British Broadcastin g Corp.
network.
"Carson is the archetypal
American, catering for an au-
dience that is terrified of even
m ome ntar y boredom,"
Kretzmer wrote.
Nancy Bank-Smith, tilting her
r ev iew in the Guardian
.. Performing Monkeys," said
she was more impressed with
Carso n 's s id e ki c k , Ed
McMahon, than with the silver-
ha1red star.
"He <McMahon> has been do-
ing nothing in particular on the
Johnny Carson show for 19 years
and Carson appreciates it," she
noted.
Robe rt McNa mara -rive
f~rmer White House national
security advisers Gordon
Gray. Walt Rostow, McGeorge
Bundy, Henry Kissinger and
Zbigniew Brzezinski -as well
as three former chairr,,en of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff -Adm.
Thomas Moorer, Gen. Lyman
Le mnitzer and Gen. Maxwell
Taylor.
Asked Sunday on his return to
the White House from a weekend
al the Camp David, Md., pres·
CSee AWACS, Page A2)
* * * AF chief
doubtful
onMXplan
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger said today that put-
l in g MX mi ss iles in
strengthened silos will "give us
the strongest possible deterrent
forces as quickly as we can get
them," but the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff disagreed.
Air Force Gen. David L. Jones
told the Senate Armed Services
Committee, "I remain to be con-
RELATED STORY-AS
vinced" that the missiles can be
made invulnerable lo Soviet at-
tack by any means other than
the so-called "shell game" or
multiple bases the Reagan ad-
ministration abandoned.
Jones said he did n ot
necessarily speak for all the
joint chiefs. ...
The administration's decision
to build 100 MX missiles and put
some of them in reinforced va-
cant Titan missile silos drew
support from some senators and
criticism from others.
Sen . Barry Goldwater, R-
Ariz., said. "I never thought the
Russians were so stupid they
couldn't figure out the shell
ga·me in a matter of hours."
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-
Wash., on the other hand, said,
"We have given the Soviets a
better target to shoot at."
Wei nb e rger di s puted
Jackson's contention, saying the
MX miss iles will be more
powerful than any the United
<See SIWS, Page A2)
r • • • * •
Ylll HDllTDll llllY PIPll
County homeless turn to parks
Campgrounds become temporary shelter for needy
:11111 By JODI CADENHEAD were full and suggested the cou-tershave spread across a picnic
o< .. °""" ,....._ pie try the alley behind the table. •
Carol Ammons lifted the piece shelter. If she had been willing When the 14 days are up
of blue tarp that serves as a to lie, Carol said she could have they'll merely pack up and stay
home for her and her husband. found a bed al a shelter for bat o v e r n i g h t i n th e i r c a r
Luckily the pounding rain had tered women. somewhere else and then return,
missed their flimsy mattress by With no place else to turn. the they said.
a fTehw inches1. h d d . t cou ole drove their beat-up Featherly Park and other e coup e a move 1.n o campgrounds in the county are
Featherly Park, on the outskirts ' ' T e m p 0 r a 'ty the last desperate stop for peo.
of Oran~e Cou~tYt several da~s pie down and out with no place
after berng evicted from ~h.e1r shelter is a cons-else to go.
Fullerton apartment for fa1hng Jean Forbalh, executive direc·
to pay rent. tant need ." tor of Share Our Selves CSOS> in
As Brad, 23, and Carol, 21, tell Costa Mesa said s he often rec-
it, they refus~d to pay rent Chevrolet through the plclur-ommends the park to ~ many
b ee.a u se their stove and esque campgrounds and draped families who come loo)(sng for
refrigerator had not worked for a piece of borrowed tarp over a help from the nonprofit or-
more than a month. Then their .couple of sticks of wood. Park ganization.
landlord padlocked their apart-rules make it impossible to stay "'For one thing, it 's $5 a
me!lt and h~s refuse.d to return more than 14 days at a time, night. And it does have showers
their belongings until they pay they say. and cooking facilities. added Ms.
the back rent, they said. . To add to their problems. Forbath. Usually the volunteer
Broke, the couple went looking Brad lost his job a couple of organization tries to oHer a hotel
for !1 temporary roof to put over days after arriving al Featherly room, a couple or days of food.
their heads and found what when he couldn't get to work on or a rarely vacant bed in the
many others in Orange County time. "This is all we own," said three bedroom Orange Coast In-
have found. Caro l. gesturing toward two lerfaith Shelter they helped open
All th~ churc~es they calJed clean plates, an assortment of at St. John the Divine Episcopal
had nothing available. A worker silverware, a can of spray de· Church six months ago.
at the Salvation Army said they odo rant a nd a bottle of af-CSeeTEMPORARY,PageA2)
~ ..... """9., .......... ....,
FISHING OR SAILING? -What appears to be a fishing pole
is tbe antenna of a radio which controls the maneuvers of
these model sailboats the latest fad among the yachting
crowd. See Page Bl.
Mesa woDlan held
in murder attempt
A 15-year-old Vietnamese im-
migrant is reported in critical
but stable condition in a hospital
this morning after boiling cook-
ing oil was poured over his face
and he was stabbed five times,
Costa Mesa police reported.
Officers said Nghia Huu
Nguyen is being treated in UCI
Medical Cente r 's burn unit
where he is s uffering third ·
degree burns over 18 percent of
his body.
Police said they arrested
Nguyen's sister-in-law Tien My
Chu, 25, on s uspicion of attempt-
ed murder at 4:22 a .m . today
after they were summoned to an
apartment at 1015 Mi ssion
Drive, Costa Mesa .
Witnesses told police the hot
oil was dumped over the youth
as he s lept on a couch in the liv-
ing room.
Officers said he was stabbed
fi ve times in the chest and arms
with a steak knife.
The woman is being held in
Orange County Jail in lieu of
$250,000 bail.
Marathon
sho-w .. 'hit'
• -v1e"W"ers .
NEW Y O RK <AP l -
"Nichola s Nick l eby,"
Broadway's most expensive
s how at $100 a ticket, left much
of the opening-night audience
feeling it got its money's worth,
but had some critics questioning
w h e t h e r t h e 8 1"2 -h o u r
performance was too much of a
good thing.
Many who saw the show Sun-
day -including some who paid
$30 for standing room -said
they came away f ee ling
refreshed.
"I never expected it to be so
exciting. You cheer for the hero
and you curse at the villain."
sa id Charle ne Brandt, of
Manhattan. "I have n't felt the
tim e . It's just gone by in a
flas h.·•
.. It's absolutely incredible. At
every intermission, we were
am a zed that we didn't notice the
passage of time," said Joseph
DiCorcia. who said he flew in
especially to see the play from
North Carolina where he teaches
at Duke University .
Asked whether the $100 was
well spent, and if he would sit
through another 812 hours to see
the play. DiCorcia replied.
"Absolutely."
The Shuber t Theater was
filled lo capacity, with 985 spec-
tators attending the $4 .4 million
extravaganza.
The s how was the R oyal
Shakespeare Company's adapta-
tion of Charles Dickens' tale of a
young innocent in a n ever-
changing world of good a nd evil
in early Victorian England.
A It hough most reviewer s
lauded the producers' undertak-
ing and the fine acting, some
<See$100, Page AZ>
11 arrested
after FV park
gang fight
Eleven members of opposing
youth gangs from Santa Ana
were arrested in Mile Square
Park in Fountain Valley Sunday
afternoon following a melee in-
volving iron bars, baseball bats,
knives and reported gunfire.
police reported. DRANGI COASJ WIATHIR
Low clouds late tonight
and early Tuesday morn-
ing, otherwise fair. Lows
tonight 58 aJong the coast,
64 inland. Coastal high
Tuesday In low 70s, inland
near 80.
"The idea that Ed should ac-
tually do something, such as re-
move a piece or chicken from a
small but cont~ntious puppy, is
treated by the audience as a
great joke."
$600,000 pkdged to Music C Four adults a nd seven
juveniles were arrested by en"ter Fountain Valley police officers
on suspicion of possession or
deadly weapons with intent to
commit assault, police said.
INSIDI TODAY
Sportnunters John Sevono
and Curt Seeden tell why ca
well ca how the Rams beat
the Brown3. See stories, Page
Cl.
INDll
[i
I: ..
The London station that car-
ried the show reported It got
"m ore t han 50 calls" from
viewers ·complaining about the
program.
But a spokesman estimated
"millions" watched the show.
16-acre portion
of marsh burned
UC Irvine work crews betan
burning a secUon or the San Joa-quin Marsh th.ls mom1n1 ln an
effort U> prevent vegetation trom
e ncroaching on the body of
water.
UCJ proteuor Dr. Phillip
Taylor said the burnJng was con-
ducted on a 16-acre section or
lhe manh. about a mile west of
the campus.
\
Times Mirror gift one of foundation 's largest
The Times Mirror Foundation
has pledged $600,000 toward tbe
construction of Oran1e County's
new performing arts center. The
grant is one of the largest ever
made by the Foundation, which
has indicated It will also con-
sl der a second grant to the
Center Endowment Fund.
The contribution brings the
total pledge to nearly $17 million
for the project. The center, U> be
built in Costa Meaa, wiU include
a multi-purpose theater current·
ly scaled by the archUect for
3,018 seats and a separate
t,OOO·seat theater. Conetructioo
costs are estimated at $t0
million with an addlUonal $19
mllUon designated for 1 Center
Endowment Fund.
" '-·.
·'The Orange County Music
Center is an extraordinary ex-
ample of tbe remarkable de·
velopment of the cultural lite of
Southern California," said Dr.
Franklin 0. Murphy, president
of the Times Mirror Foundation
and chairman of the Executive
Commlttee of Times Mirror.
"Tbe Orange County Music
Center will become an outat.and·
ing imUtuUon in its own ri&ht
&nd will complement exiatin&
performing aru facilities in
Southern California," Murphy
saJd. "lta presence Will make
the reeioo an even mol'e desire ·
ble vis1Una place for oaUonaJ
tourinr companies."
The Ttmes Mirror Foundation
was e•abllshed In 1H2 and
makes grants primarily In the
areas of higher education and
culture. It is the corporate foun-
dation 'of The Times Mirror Co.
which owns the Orange Coast
Datly Pilot, the Los Angeles
Times, and numerous other
media businesses throughout the
United States. Times Mirror's
other Orange County baaed
operations include Times Mirror
Cable Television, Plan Hold
Corp. and Chartpak Pickett.
"We were particularly lm·
• pressed with the thoroughnat,
lmaetoation and commltrnt11t ot
those providinl the leaderabiJ> ln
brln1ln1 the Oran1e County
.Muslc Center to fruition,''
Murphy said.
<See GIP'I', Pa1e Al>
Police say no one was injured
in the fight, mainly because
forces scattered when one sus-
pect reportedly fired several
shots from a handgun.
T he battle look place at the
Orange County's facility parking
lot on Euclid Street just north or
Warner Avenue at 5:30 p.m .,
police reported.
Patl'Ol of the county park la
the responsibility of the Sheriff's
Department but police were
notified first of the Junllre.
Adulta arrested were Samuel _
Gomez, 11, Santa Aaa, Ja.e
Alfredo Jaoenea, •. Sallta Au,
Michael Cliff Soaa, lt, s.nta
Ana, and J ... Ma.rtiDa, it. ...
t a Ana. Tbe HVH J• .....
were between 11 ud 17, ,.._
repoNd. ! .
I
Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, October 6, 1981
· Who Will get -missing woman's estate?
'REWARD CLIMBS Reward
.; monev off cred for the cap·
'tu r e' of th e kill e r s of
C alifornia Hi ghway
U.p a t r o I m a n ,J o h n n v R
•, ;\1 a r t i n e z 1 a I) o v e I • a n d
~·wounding bf Off1('cr James
b E Szabo ~m elled to S27 .000
1<over th<.• weekend. The of
h.fi('<.•rs wen• shot Thursda~ m
t .. \lhambr;i
")
'..~Huntington
l· :firemen
I ~J rescue two
n· Two young women trapped by
na bedroom fire in their second
floor Huntington Beach apart-
.. m ent early today were fortunate
'(their home was across the street
•Jrom a fire station. officials
\rs aid .
The women. Karen Whitworth
'•and Miche lle Triano. were
t.rescued when firefighters placed
a ladder to a second-story win-
ndow . Huntington Beach Fire
v Captain Roger Hos mer said
-• Hosmer said the blaze was re-
ported at 5.32 a.m. at an apart-
m ent building at 733 Lake St. He
said the fire originated in a
ch air placed too close to a built·
in wall healer
The captain said the blaze
blocked the hall and s tairway.
fo r c ing the wo me n to take
refuge in a second bedroom.'
.., f·iref1 gh tcrs. r es ponding
.., quicklv from the station across
"the i:;treet. rescued the women
.,·through a window in the second
,,bedroom and quickly e x -
•t1~uished the fire, he said.
Damage was estimated at
ri.$3,000 to the building, Sl,000 to
n,the contents
..
~:NB's mayor
'satisfactory
at hospital
~ '.> Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather, rushed by her husband
to St. Joi-c>ph 's Hospital in
11 Orange with chest pains late
I\· Priday, 1s reported in "satisfac·
,1tory condition" today by
,h ospital ofricials
· Mrs . Heather is still undergo-
't ing tests. a hospital spokesman l~·s aid today, but is expected to be
v moved from a cardiac care unit.
1' Her hus band, cardiologist Dr.
''Loren Heather, said today, "She
b definitely did not have a heart
"'attack
t•· "She's doing real well, r saw
11 ht'r last evening and she was
feeling fine She had pains in her
11'c h es t I al c F r 1 da y and
early Saturday morning.
"We didn't want to mess
around with chest pains."
Mf!sa to eye
heliport bids
Public hearings to consider
two applications to install
heliports in north Costa Mesa
are scheduled by the Costa Mesa
City Council tonight at 6:30 in
City Hall, 77 Fair Drive.
The applications are sought by
the Los Angeles Times and
Downey Savings and Loan As-
sociation.
The council continued hear·
ings on the applications in April
to explore ways of improving
helicopter noise problems over
north Costa Mesa residential
areas.
ORANGE COAST
By TM A.llocJated Preti
A Loe Anctlea County ottl~tal
end an attorney bne 1qu1red
orf ln • court n.hl over wbo wur
adminlater the 120-mllllon est1le or mlulna millionaire TbeJma
Jeanette Gaston.
Mn. Gaston, 80, di•appeared
from her Rancho Park residence
June 28, le1vtn1 a note on her
front door aaylnJi she waa look· Ing for her cal. Soon afterwards,
someone began trying to aeU her
property and cash checks from
her bank accounts. Forged let·
ters over Mrs . Gaston's
signature said she was running
a war to have some fun.
From Page A1
SILOS. • •
States has and the silos will give
them greatly increased protec·
lion during an interim period
while the United States works on
another missile system.
·'The previous administration
was willing to live with the risks
of an agin~ B-52 force for the
1980s, and the un certain
sc hedule and unproven
capabilities of an advanced
technology bomber for the
1990s," Weinberger told the
Senate Armed Services Committ""
tee.
H e said the Reagan ad ·
ministration chose to go ahead
with the B-1 bomber as an in-
terim measure because it is "a
far less risky course ."
* * * From Page A1
AWACS. • •
idential retreat if he were wor·
ried, Reagan replied, "I'm
always worried until you can
count the votes."
It takes a majority vote of
both houses or Congress by Oct.
31 to overturn the proposed $8.5
billion sale of five Airborne
Warning and Control System
planes and a package of fear to
upgrade Saudi Arabia's 62 F-l!i
fighters -extra fuel tanks,
bomb racks a nd late-modei
Sidewinder missiles.
700 Coast
• mstructors
set to vote
About 700 full-time Coast Com·
munity College District instruc-
tors were scheduled to vote to-
day and Tuesday on a 7 percent
pay raise offer for the 1981-82
school year.
The same proposal was reject-
ed 2-1 by the teachers last June.
But after meeting with district
officials and a state mediator
last Wednesday, the teachers'
bargaining team in a split vote
agreed to present the offer .to in-
structors a second time.
The proposal applies to
fuUtime instructors at Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa,
Golden West College in Hunt·
.ington Beach and Coastline
College, which offers classes
throughout the district.
Car strikes
Valley boy
A 10-year-old Fountain Valley'
boy is in critical condition today
following a Saturday morning
accident when he was struck on
his bicycle by a car in a residen·
tial intersection, police reported.
Eric Stein, of 10920 Slater
Ave .. was bit at about 10 a.m.
when a car s werved to miss
another bicyclist al the comer of
Los Jardines East and San
Corzo Street, police reported.
From Page A1
GIFT •••
H enr y T . Segerstrom,
chairman of the trustees for the
center campaign, said the grant
s hows there is growing support
for the project.
·'This Center is going to have
a positive Impact upon the
cultural growth of the entire
Southern California region and
major corporations. and founda-
tions recognize this value to resl·
dents and business alike,"
Segerstrom said.
Daily Pilat c11111ttect advertlelng 714/f0•51U
/.ti other doepe,,ment• 142-4a1
Thomas P Haley 1111.bl~M •td Cl'\ael E , •. '''""" Otfw-tw
Robert N Weed
p,~,
Thomas A Murphon e
lO•IOO
Michael P Harvev
-•t·llO O·•"-'"
L K4y Sct1ul1t ~Oloi.t•-<>"• 1<ennetr1 N Goddnr(I Jr
C:wcljlllllOf' [).roc1.,
Bern1rO Schulman c:..-.-
Cl'larles M Loos
l\l""flO'"O ld·IOt
Carol A Moore
ylo""
MAIN 0,FICE
JJO Wnl h. ~ Co.I• .M-J;.A
M••I •Oortu llo• I \60 COit• f!u, §f' t)•H.
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VOL. 74, 'NO. m ti
....
A 39-year·old carpet salesman
from Newport Beach who bad
befriended the widow was ar·
rested Sept. 2 on various
charaes connected wltb th ease
H he tried to re-enter the U.S.
from Mexico.
Gordon Treharn~. the Los
Ap1eles County public ad·
mlnist.rator and public 1uardian,
filed a petition in Superior Court
last week seeking control of the
estate. In late August, at the rt!·
quest of poli ce officers in-
vestigating Mrs. Gaston's disap-
pearance, Treharne sought and
received temporary authority to
administer the estate.
His bid tor a more laslln1
steward5hJp ls belna challented
by John Mlttrlck, a Hemet at·
torney who says ln his petition
that Mrt. Gaston named him ex·
ecutor of her property and left
about half her estate to his two
daughters in a handwritten, un·
wltneased wiU dated July 1980.
Mlttrick says his briefcase con-
talnlng the original copy of the
will was stolen while he was
bringing the will ln to show
county officiaJs.
"Doesn't it look a little bad?
Sure. that's been going through
my mlnd ... , " he says. "But
l'd take a polygraph or anythi.ne
on thlt lb!na lf ll were admlttl·
bit as evidence."
M lltrick said be bed four
copies or the wltl ln lbe brief·
cue, but no, other copies.
Another copy was found In Mrs.
Gaston's locked desk. However,
tbe portions relating to Mlttrick
had been crossed out in blue
ballpoint lnk, Treharne's peU·
lion stales.
Mittrick said be believes th
alterations were made by Larry
Remsen, who befriended Lhe
widow. He was arrested Sept. 2
as he tried to re-enter the U.S.
from Mexico and charged with
grand theft and forgery, receiv·
ln1 slolen proP'!rtY and unlawfuJ
1U1ht to avo d pro ecutlon.
Remsen bad eccoss to the
house, Mlttrkk aaya, and haa
made accusations against him to
the poUce.
Treharne meanwhtle says he
doesn't believe in the eulhentici·
ty of the July 1980 will. He also
believes bls omce can do a bet·
ter job of admlnistering the
estate. Ills petition attaches two
other Gaston wills, a formal one
from 1962 that does not mention
Mittrick and another handwril·
led will from 1979 that lists Mil·
trick as executor.
Many ballks cut prime r':Jte to J9
NEW YORK <AP> -Several
major banks today joined a
move to cut their prime lending
rate one-half percentage point to
19 percent, reflecting a decline
in their cost of funds and the im-
pact "Of· a weakening economy on
theil"' business.
Continental Illinois National
Bank & Trust Co .. the nation's
s eventh-largest commercial
bank, was first to adopt a 19 per-
cent prime rate last Monday.
From Page A1
Matching that move today
were Chase Manhattan, the na·
lion's third-largest bank, fifl.h-
ranked Morgan Guaranty, No. 9
First National Bank of Chicago,
No . 12 Crocker National Bank
and No. 14 Marine Midland
Bank.
The 19 percent rate should
spread through the industry and
further cuts are likely, said
Edward Yardeni , chief
economist at the investment
firm or E.F. Hutton & Co.
The 19 percent rate is the
lowest prime since May. Al re·
cently as last month, the prime
stood at 20,5 percent, one point
below a record 21.5 percent or
December 1980.
The prime rate is the base
banks use to compute interest on
loans to their most creditworthy
corporate customers. Some
s hort-term loans to major
customers are made at interest
TEMPORARY HOUSING ,JN PARK • • •
Ms. Forbath pointed out that
27 families came to the SOS of·
fice one day last week looking
for groceries.
Since the temporary shelter
opened last March in Costa
Mesa it has never been empty.
About 60 adults and 20 children
have found a temporary home
there so far.~
"Talk to any agency in this
county, temporary shelter is a
co n stant need ," said Ms .
Forbath. "There are just so few
places to send people. They have
no place to go."
By 3 o'clock in the afternoon
the line of men , women and
children looking for a bed at the
Salvation Army's shelter at 818
E. 3rd St. in Santa Ana is about
70 deep, said business manager
Warren Johnson .
Gasoline leak
flowing into
Irvine creek
Gasoline continued flowing to·
day from an Irvine car wash in·
to the San Diego Creek, but the
fuel was being mopped up before
it could travel downstream to
Newport Bay, said a represen·
tative of the State Department
of Fish and Game.
Ralph Young said the fuel is
leaking from an underground
pipe connected.. to the gasoline
storage tank at the new car
wash at Barranca Parkway and
Lake Road.
He said that workmen were
trying to repair the pipe this
morning to determine if there
were any other leaks.
The flow of gasoline into the
San Diego Creek was first de·
tected at 9 a.m. Saturday by an
Irvine woman.
A representative from the
Oran,ge County Fire Depart-
ment said about 200·400 gallons
of gasoline had flowed into the
creek.
Young said that whatever
gasoline might reach th e
Newport Bay would disperse
quickly and wouldn't pose an en-
vironmental hazard.
He said representatives from
the State Department of Fish
and Game continue to monitor
the situation.
Series set
on divorce
A divorce recovery workshop
begins Tuesday night al St. An-
drew's Presbyterian Church in
Newport Beach.
The workshop will be led by
the Rev. Bill Flanagan. It will
be offered on six Tuesday eve·
nings.
Topics covered include coping
with your forme r spouse,
forgiveness, ass uming new
responsibilities, being a single
parent and remarriage.
Cost for the workshop Is $15
and includes Jim Smoke's book,
"Growing Through Divorce."
The sessions will be held from
7:30 to 9:30 p.m . For more ln·
formation, call 631-2880.
L-DS chief alert
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
The 86-year-old president of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter·
day Saint.I was alert and sittin•
up Sunday after a procedure to
stop intestinal bleedln1. bis
pbysicinn said. Spencer W. Kim·
ball bas been at LDS Hoapttal
for lour weeks following 1ur1e.ry
to l"emove nulds rrom r'"'""
hll brain and akil .
When the doors open at 5. the
36 beds will go on a first come·
first served basis. Many will be
tur n ed away. But several
nearby hotels have agreed to of.
fer rooms to families through an
agreement with the Salvation
Army, said Johnson.
Still , the need for more beds
and food has become a pressing
problem. especially since tfle
Rescue Mission was closed four
months ago, said Johnson.
Last year the Salvation Army
served 18,000 meals. In the first
. eight months of this year alone
30,350 meals have been served in
the Santa An a cafeteria. Jn or-
der to do this, the Salvation
Army has had to stop serving
seconds, said Johnson.
Generally speaking, a bed at
the Salvation Army is available
only three days. But the rule is
fl exible and any family needing
extra assistance will be allowed
to stay lofiger. said Johnson.
At the Christian Temporary
Housing in Orange the down and
out will find one of the few tem-
porary housing shelters in the
county. There is no limit on the
stay. but then again -rarely is
there a vacancy.
··Right now r have five sleep·
ing on the floor." said director
Michael Elias. whose offi ce re-
ceives about 800 calls a month
from families looking for a place
to stay.
"It's most certa inly gelling
worse," said Elias. "Six years
ago you could find the m an inex-
pens ive hote l. Now you can
for get 1t."
* * * How to reach
OC shelters
Anyone looking for em ergency
shelter or wishing to make a
donation can contact the follow-
ing agencies:
Share Our Selves, 545 19th St.,
Costa Mesa, 642-3451.
The Salvation Army, 818 E.
3rd St .. Santa Ana, 546-7880.
Christian Temporary Housing.
704 N. Glassell . Orange, 771-2843.
* We have the
best selection
of children's
ski clothing
and equipment
in Southern
California!!!
2500 W. Coast Hwy.
. Newport leach
7 14-631-3280
Although he strongly recom-
mends Featherly Park during
the summer months, Elias does
not in winter. ··r couldn't put a
family out there jn the cold and
r ain."
With precious little temporary
housing available in the county.
it may seem that there are no
answers. But that's not so, ac·
cording to Ms Forbath.
Although zoning laws in many
cities make it illegaJ, families
and seniors are beginning to live
together in order to cut ex·
penses, said Ms. Forbath .
Two families who met at the
Interfaith shelter in Costa Mesa
recently decided to share hous-
ing said Ms . Forbath. In thCj
future. that solution is going l<>
be used by more and more peo·'
pie. she predicted.
From Page A1
$100 ...
said the play contained dull
passages.
"While the high points of this
'Nicholas Ni c;kle by " are
Himalayan indeed," said Frank
Rich in The New York Times,
"They are separated by· dull
passages, which clog the produc-
tion's arteries."
Jay Sharbutt of The Associat-
ed Press wrote, "Alas, the pro·
duction, which gets off to a rous·
ing start with fl ying muffins and
actors dashing down the aisles
.. isn't always engrossing.
particularly in the first act .
Luckily, the dull passages are
few. the dramatic and touching
ones many."
But Douglas Watt in the Daily
News said such languid mo-
ments are probably "due as
much to the spectator's momen·
tary lapse of attention" in what
it termed "big, sweeping theater
of a kind you are unlikely to en-
counter more than once in a
lifetime."
Outside the theat er, 45th
Street looked like ·'Limousine
R o w " with c h a uffere d
automobiles waiting ·ror the
p a t r o n s •t o 1 e a v e l h e
theater.
I
r ates below the prime rate. But
many s malt bu!ii nesses are
charged above the prime rate ..
Interest rates on consumer
loans are not tied to the prime
rate.
Many s hort-term interest
rates are weU below the prime
rate. Federal funds -the in-
terest on overnight loans or un-
committed reserves among
banks and an important source
of funds for financial institutions
traded today at 15.25 percent.
Laguna dogs
'adopted'
after plea
Volunteers at the Laguna
Beach animal s helte r say 13
s tray dogs that would have been
des troyed We dnesda y were
place d in homes over the
weekend.
Nancy..c;oodwin, president of
Laguna's Pet Responsibility
Committee which operates the
sheller, said local residents
came to the shelter Saturday
and Sunday in response to pleas
from the_co..futittee for pet lov-
ers to ado~ the dogs
llowever, she said four dogs
are still in need of a home. Un·
less someone adopts them by
Wednesday, they will have to be
destroyed, she said.
Mrs. Goodwin said persons
wishmg to adopt one of the four
dogs facing destruction Wednes-
day, the deadline set by the
county, pay a SlO fee for adop-
tion, whi ch mcludes a ll inocula·
tions except rabies .
The shelter 1s located at 20412
Laguna Canyon Road and is
open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. dai-
ly. Mrs. Goodwin said those
wishing information should caJI
494 -2000 or 497-3552
Coastal plan
• • gets a1r1ng
in Laguna
Laguna Beach City Council
members will resume discussion
on the city's Local Coastal Plan
tonight at 6 o'clock at City Hall,
505 Forest Ave.
The proposed plan includes
open space provisions that com-
munity landowners say infringe
on private property rights.
Councilman Howard Dawson
says the proposed plan would al·
low only 225 new homes lo be
built on the r e maining 1,000
acr es of undeveloped hillside
land in the city.
Obermeyer
Skyr
Roffe
Demetre
Meister
1st Team
..
'
'
I
. .. Jilli
.... ~
Jolin Raitt. actor-smger 1s slwum with the two women m his
life. his daughter sitfger Bcmme Raitt . left. and h1!) new bnde.
Hosemo.ry Yorba Raitt The couple were morned after being
re mtroduced about /we months ago They were first engaged
11wre than 4'1 years ago but lost touch with one another
Entert(liner:'s estate sues Coors ads
A judge has ruled that the
estate of bluegrass maestro
Lester Flatt can sue a Coors
beer distributor for using the
musician's likeness in its ad·
vertising.
The suit claims Flatt was a
teetotaler and never would
have approved of having his
likeness in a beer ad.
ExecuLors of Flatt's estate
s ued Coor s of t h e Cum·
World ch ess c hampion
Anatoly Karpov took a com·
manding 2·0 lead into his
third match toda y with
challenger Victor Korchnol.
Korchnoi lost the second
straight game Sunday after
play was resumed in a match
adjourned Saturday at this
Merano. Italy.
Experts say the 5Q.year-old
Korchnoi. a Soviet defector.
h as been playing ragged
chess in his second attempt
lo unseat the 30·year·old
Sov iet c hampion , and
Ka rpov has playe d flaw·
lessly.
Emmylou Harris is now a
Ke ntucky coal mine.
Warner Bros. Records said
Curlis 8 . "Booge" Sloan of
Elkhorn City. Ky .. named a
mine after the country music
singer when he registered it.
Miss Harris, voted female
berland Inc. for $1 .5 million
in July. The suit claimed that
the beer distributor included
a drawing of Flatt and his
former partner , Earl
Scruggs, on a poster without
their approval.
ChanceUor Robert Brandt
ruled in Nashville that an en-
tertainer's right to control
the commercial use of his
name or face continues after
hjs death.
vocalist of the year'io 1980 by
the Country Music Associa-
tion. is known for hits such as
.. Blue Kentucky Girl" and
•·tf l Could Only Win Your
Love."
Air Force Maj. Gen. James
A. Abrahamson has be~n
named lo direct the space
shuttle program. the Na·
tional Aeronautics and Space
Administration announced.
Abrahams on, who was
selected to be an astronaut in
th e Manned Orbiting
Laboratory Program of the
Air Force before it was can·
celled in 1969, will s ucceed
John f'. Yardley in No·
vember. NASA said. Yardley
left in May to join McDonnell
Dou);(las Corp.
Th e 49-year·old Abra·
hamson flew 49 combat mis-
sions in Vietnam.
New York Pbllbarmoale
conductor Z••la llt~&a It
bla&tln1 P,etadea& Re...-•1
declak>n to 11la1h money tor
the performini arts.
''In el1ht years II IOV·
ernor of CaUtornla, bt came
to one concert'' or 'tbe Loi
Angeles Pbllharmontc,
Mehta says ln am Interview in
People magastne.
"Culture in some parts of
t h is count y Is considered
almost a luxury of the elite,"
he said. ''It Is so wron1 to
t hink that. 'Don Giovanni'
will exist until the last flame
goes out of this earth.··
The first man to travel
faster than· his voice says he
would like to fly the space
shuttle, "but I had my fun ln
other aircraft.''
Charles Yeager of Cedar
Ridge, Calif., who retired
from the Air Force in 1975 as
a brigadier generaJ, and six
others were inductff ipto Ute
International Space Rall or
Fame at Alamogordo. N.M.
Others inducted, but not
present, were: astronaut.a
AJao Shepard, who retilltd as
a Navy rear admiral and
lives in Deer Park, Texas;
Scott Carpenter, who retired
from the Navy as a com·
msnder and lives in. Canoga
Park, Calif.; Gordon Cooper,
who retired as an Air Force
colonel and li ves in Glendale,
Calif.; and Walt.er Schirra,
who retired as a Navy cap-
tain and now lives in
Inglewood, Calif.
Virgil Grissom, America's
second man into space. was
inducted posthumously.
Cardiologist Paul M. Zoll
received a medal from the
Texas Heart Institute for in-
venting a devide physicians
fi rst dismissed as a toy -the
Pacemaker.
The device. which has been
miniaturized, computerized,
inte rnalized a nd generally
much refined over the years,
gives an estimated l million
heart patients hope for long,
active lives.
As early as 1952, Zoll. a
Boston resident . was using
external electrical stimula·
tion to treat patients whose
hearts had stopped.
President Reagan said he
will nominate Harold Edson
Shear, a retired admir al who
was commander-in·chief of
the Allied Forces Southern
Europe, to be administrator
of the Maritime Administra·
tion. Shear is vice president
of the Norton Lilly Co., Inc.,
of New York. He is a former
vice chief of naval opera·
tions.
Warm Tuesday due
8rowft1wlte
Buffalo
Cl\arlst11 SC:
Coastal Ctlarllln WV
CMYtllM
Some low clouds late tonl911t and Chlca90
Clnclnna11 u rly Tuelday mornlnQ, otllerwlM Cleveland lelr co111mbus Coastal low SI. lnland M. CNNI Oal·FIWlh hl9ll low 10s, Inland near IO. Waler Denver .,
EIMwl>lr•. outer CN •l•I waters g::r~~lntl
Point Concepllon to San Nicolas Duluth
hland. ~1 winos l?to101lnots El Poo
wllll l to S·foot combined seas Hanford
111rou9h tonl9llt. OtMrwlM, 119111 Helena
varlabl• w•llds n'911t and mor11ln9 H-lulu !lour• be<omlnQ _,,.,1y 10 to II Houston
knoll. Ont to :Mool wnterly s ... 11. lnclnaplll
Mostly clOUcly nl9ht •lld mor11l119 Jadiallvlle
!lours. Sunny atter._..s. Kanl City
t? ,.
$j ~ ,. ~
13 n 61 40
69 46
76 ..
61 SI
10 SI
'3 72
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'
Las V•111• IO s.
Llllle Rock IS 10 mmIJ ---=== NOU VJ 0..0 ol (-o
U.S. summ ary
Wldt ly S<alltred thund.,Slorm1
re n9ed today over Missouri,
Nol1hern ArktnMI and WfllHn Ken.
tucky """ MIHourl whlle rain 11..,
fell over IM mlcl-Allanll< CN •I -
'°vtl>lrn Fl«lda
SltlH -• ,,_,1, o,,.rcast S<lftday
from tht Oaltot .. "''-" Ille G,.•t Lakes and from 11>1 Ollto Valley to
Ht• York Rain or w.atterH ,,.,wer.s were
1«1cast fodly for 1111 O.kot ... the
C1n1r11 Plelns, thl mid-a nct -
Mississippi Valley and over IM
Nortllust. si-rs .,.., are ••i>e<led
over ,,,. nol1h PKlllc CNSI and ,,,.
mou11talni of Arlrone.
SuMy tlll~ ... ,. eJCpe<ted lrom
the Grut Basin to th• nortl>trn
Rockies alld In ,,,. soutr.ast.
Extended
outlook
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
COASTAL ANO MOUNT'AIH AREAS
Soma lllOftl and motn1"9 clouds
CNll•I ar9ft. Otlle<wl• fair 1klH.
In coaata4 .,..as, hl;M n to IS. Lows 111 50I and 1-r 60s. Mounteln hlglle
621071. L.owSUtoO.
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642•6086
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 5, 1981 H/F
..............
• WHERE'S THE UNIFORM? -The Denver Police Depart·
ment's newest rookie doesn't need one. It's a remotely con
trolled robot that can be used in surveillfnce. firefighting.
host a~e·t aking s ituations and handling of dangerous
matenals.
IRA hunger strike:
What gains made?
LONDON (AP> -ln late May,
with four Irish nat io n a list
hunger strikers dead and sup-
port for their cause near its peak
in Northe rn Ireland , Prime
Minister Mngaret T hatcher
went to the stricken province
and declared the IRA might well
have played its "last card."
Although Mrs. Thatc her now
appears the immediate viclOr in
the deadly contest of wills now
that the Irish Republican Army
has ended the seven·month fast,
the IJlA s till can c laim
enormous gains in recruitment,
poll tic al clout aAd money.
And IRA supporters say their
bloody 12·year campaign to oust
the British fro m Northern
Ireland is far from over, despite
Saturday's announcement.
Throughout the protest. the
Conservative prime minister re·
fused to soften her hardline ap·
proacb to demands of the pro-
testing inmates at the Maze
Prison outside Belfast.
To caUs for "more flexibility''
from U.S. Sen. Edward M. Ken·
nedy, D·Mass .. and other lead·
ing Irish·American politicians,
Mrs. Thatcher replied that the
Northern Ireland prison regime
was among the most humane
and modern in Europe.
Under no circumstances, she
said, would he r government
negotiate with convicted killers
over demands she said would
tre.t them as political prisoners
-a move ~he Britis h saw as
legitimizing the outlawed IRA.
Laguna chamber
mixer scheduled
A Chamber of Commerce
e vening mixer will be held
Wedoesday at Las Brisas
r estaurant in Laguna Beach
from.5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
The mixer is open to chamber
members and guests. No·hosl
cocktails will· be served, as well
as hors d 'oeuvres, and door
prizes wiJI be awarded. For in·
formation. call the chamber at
494·1018.
ANALYSI S
"lf we gave in to these de·
mands, what would stop them
from asking for more?" a gov·
ernment spokesman said in an
interview with The Associated
Press last week
Ostensibly , the hunge r
s trikers were demanding
changes in the prison regime, in·
eluding the right of free associa·
t i on within the H ·s haped
cellblocks of the Maze, the right
to not be assigned prison work
a nd restoration of parole time
denied protesting prisoners.
But both sides agreed t hat the
guerrillas were seeking restora·
tion of "special category" status
granted them in 1972 and then
abolished by Britain in 1976.
The JRA did not win special
s tatus for the prisoners, but it is
widely accepted that by focusing
worldwide attention on the pro·
test the guerriUa movement has
generated scores of new recruits
and millions of dollars in aid,
especially fro m I RA sym.
pathizers in the United States.
Longtime observer s of
Nor thern Ireland's sectarian
turmoil fear the I RA. having
s uffered a setback in the hunger
strike, might step up its attacks
on police and troops. But it was
n ot expected that anothe r
hunger strike would soon be
mounted.
The hunger strike sparked the
worst wave of violence to hit
Northern Ireland in recent
memory . Since IRA guerrilla
Bobby Sands s tarted the protest
March l , 64 people -including
31 members or the province's
security• forces -have been
killed viole11tly.
All efforts to mediate the con·
flict failed to move ell her side.
But in the end, it was the rel·
atives of t he prisone rs who
proved the decisive factor.
As the protest dragged on,
Roman Catholic priests focused
their attention on convincing the
families that nothing was to be
gained fl-om allowing their loved
ones to die.
Public
aid 'not
needed'
. .
NEW YORK <AP) -A ma.
jorlty of Americans thinks that
most people who receive money
from welfare could get along
without it if they tried, accord·
ing to the latest Associated
Press·NBC News poll.
The poll said 55 percent
believe welfare recipients could
get along without it if they tried.
while 32 percent said they realty
need the help. Thirteen percent
said they were not s ure.
T he poll contacted 1,601 adults
by telephone Monday a nd Tues·
day in a nationwide scientific
random sampling.
The results of the latest poll
remained consistent with the
last time the same question was
asked in an NBC News poll in
1977, when 59 percent said
welfare recipient$ could get
along withQut it. 30 percent said
they really need the help and 11
percent were unsure.
President Reagan has said he
wants to r educe waste and
cheating in the welfare system.
with more than $27 billion in
budget cuts coming from "en·
title ment" programs s uch as
food stamps and Aid to Families
with Dependent Children.
New eligibility rules have
already reduced the nearly 4
miJlion families which had been
receiving welfare by more than
10 percent and cut benefits to an
additional 280,000 families.
In the latest poll , women we re
more likely than men to say
most welfare recipients don't re·
ally need the help A majority of
white respondents said welfare
recipients don't really need the
help, while a majority of blacks
said they do.
People who earn more than
$35,000 a year were more likely
than respondents in lower in·
come groups to say welfare
recipients reall y need the help.
Sc hool e yes
volunteer s
Parents and residents who live
near Newport Elementary
School, 14th Street and Balboa
Boulevard, Newport Beach, are
being asked by the PT A to
volunteer time to enrich cur·
riculum at the school.
Sought are residents who can
offer two hours of lime a week to
art, recreation and reading ac.
tivities.
Especially s ought are
teachers to aid in the school
Reading Assistance Program.
Interested residents are asked to
call Judy While. volunteer
coordinator at 642-9082.
Sign language
course due
A night course in American
sign taniuage is being offered
by the Huntington Beach Adult
School every Tuesday from Oct.
6 until Jan. 6.
The course will cover the
origin, vocabulary and syntax of
manual communication used by
t he hearing.impaired person and
his associates.
The course will be offered
from 7 to 9 p.m. at Huntington
Beach High School. Registration
is in room 107 at the high school
on Oct. 6, the fi rst night of class.
For further information. call
964·6855.
just right for thi5
timi ofyzar ...
I
••
H/F Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1911
I
High court nixes
Silkwood hearing
WASJllNGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court today re·
fused to revlve charges that the
FBI and the Ke rr-McGee Corp.
undercut Karen Sllkwood's
nuclear plant, union-organizing
drive.
The justices, without com·
ment, let stand a ruling dismiss·
lng the conspiracy and cover-up
allegations tile d after Ms.
Silk wood's death in 1974.
The case acted on today was a
part of an earlier suit filed by
ti eir s and s urvivors of Ms.
Silkwood, who died tn a car
crash on the way to a meeting
with a labor leader and a New
York Times reporter.
ed Solidarity demands to cancel
the latest round of price blkea
but pled1ed to negotiate with the
Independent labor federation on
possible compensation for the ln·
crtt&Ses.
Solidarity chief Lech Wale11
fired oH a telegram to the Polish
premier Sunday demand.in& lm·
mediate suspension of increaaeJ
doubling the price of cigarettes
to 40 cents a pack for the
cheapest brand and to $1.80 a
pack for the more expensive.
Irish priso JWn
ref use j ail garb
Lowerin g franc BELI¥.ST, Northern Ireland
• • (AP> -Jailed Irish nationalist sparks optimism guerrillas still refused to wear
prison uniforms tod~y, continu·
PARIS (AP> -French o ing a protest deman ing special
ficials and importers welcom~ despite the col apse of the
the European Common Market"s IRA hunger strike.
decision to lower the French Sinn Fein, the outlawed Irish
Crane 8.5 percent against the Re publican Army 's political
Dutch guilder and the German wi ng, said the "blanket protest"
mark. But the optimism was not by 400 Maze Prison inmates
reflected in financial markets, would continue until the British
where the dollar appreciated government gr a nted the de·
almost 3 percent today against mands that spawned the death
the franc. fast.
The U.S. currency was trading
at around 5.6400 francs in Paris
this morning, compared to 5.4945
at Friday·s market close.
'One house veto'
gets court study
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
U .S . Supreme Court today
agreed to study the conslitu·
tion ality of the ''one-house
veto," under whkh either house
of Congress may set aside de·
cisions or the president and gov·
ernment agencies.
The justices said they will re·
view a ruling that jeopardizes
the practice, an element in more
than 200 laws dictating the
spending of billions of dollars.
Solida rit y price
pro test ignored?
GDANSK, Poland CAP ) -The
Polish government today reject·
Ease up on cash
-administratio n
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Reagan administr ation, con-
cerned that the nation's money
and credit supply may be
pinched too tightly with a re·
cession looming, wants the
FederaJ Reserve Board to loosen
its grip a bit to get the economy
moving again.
Treasu r y Department
s pokes man Marlin Fitzwater
said Sunday that the administra·
tion is not calling for an "easy
money policy" or asking that the
Fed change its policy.
Parents h alt buses
CLEVELAND <AP> -Angry
parents carrying signs reading
.. We Need Ye llow Buses"
picketed Cleveland·s four school
bus depots today to protest the
use of public transportation for
desegregation .
11---~---·--: ~ ~---~··~-1
: Of the various cha racte;;s~~cs whic h gave I. ·-~ ~ ~niquen1 ehss tohBrof oks hBrothers, nonfe is more ~.
~ antcgra t ant e act t at we manu acture
~ apparel in our own workrooms. ~
~ The d istinction of ~
~ "OWi'V MAKE" ~ For our "Own ~~
] Make" suits. we
~ select only fine ~ quali ty fabrics in ~
~ colorations and ~
~ desi~ns exclusively ~ , ~;;~~::d,::i~:~;hcy ~
~ by ou r own fine ~
~ c raftsmen. T he ~ ~ :~:~::~ :'.::~:i•y ~
Brooks Brothers people, proud of their product.
"Own Make" suits are for men of taste and under-~
~ . statement, who have an appreciation for fine qua)-'
~.· ity merchandise. T he soft sho ulder, natural lines, ~
, and pliable coa t construction afford maximum ~
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proud of the fairness of the prices, for in "Own ~
Make" we achieve some of the best values in the ~
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HTAIUSHIO 1111
~cfP~ ~~-.x~ ' ~ f'ur nis bing9 fo r ijlm. Wo mtn ~· 8oy.s ~
~ 530 WEST 7TH STREET. LOS ANGELES, CA.l...lF. 90014 ~
" . FASHION ISLAND, NEWPoRT BEAOf 92660 ~~
~ ...... ~~~...,,~
Body ·oswald's 'beyond doubt'
DALLAS (AP) -Two decades
of theories about at leaat one
aapeet ol Uw u1u1lnaUoG ol
President John P'. Kennedy ap-
parentb' have been dlaproytd
with a llndlna "beyond any
doubt" that Lee Harvey Otwald
w11 buried in the 1rave marked
with b1a name.
dlaturb that body aaaln. Ever,"
11ld Dr. Linda Norton, the head
of a patholocy team that an-
nounced Sunday that the tx·
humed body wa• indeed Otwald,
Identified by the Warren Com·
mlaaion u the man who killed
Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1983.
"We both Individually and as
a team have concluded beyond
any doubt, and I mun beyond
any doubt, that the individual
burled under the name Lee
Harvey Oswald ln Rose Hlll
cem etery Is Lee Harvey
Oswald," she said.
BriUsh author and atsassina·
lion lheorlat Michael Eddowea,
who agreed to pay for the ex·
humatlon, had contended the
body ln Oswald's grave was that
Eddowes. who wrote "The
Oswald Files," said Sunday he
was "aurprised, but ln no way
disappointed" at the flndlnp
Oswald's widow, Marina Oswald
Porter, said she was relieved
and "pleased with the results of
the autopsy."
·'There la ne> reason to ever
Jews blast Nixon
on AWACS backing
• of a Russian impos tor who
replaced Oswald when he de·
fectetf to the Soviet Union in
19S9.
Mrs. Port.er, who stayed at a
discreet distance as the body
was exhumed at Fort Worth'•
Rose Hill Burial Park Sunday
morning, said she was "glad the
Issues have been resolved."
NEW YORK (AP) -Mem·
bers of American Jewish &roups
have responded ancrUy to
former J>realclent Richard M.
Nixon's declaration of 1uppC>rt
for President Reagan's plan to
sell Airborne Warning and Con·
33 sermom
heard
by Mormons
SALT LAKE CITY CAP>
Some faithful Mormons will
perish along with the wicked in
the chaos prtteding the Second
Coming, but they needn't worry
since they will have earned a
'·glorious immortality," a
church leader says.
Elder Bruce R. McConkie
spoke Sunday to thousands of
members of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter ·day Saints
gathered in the Tabemade on
Temple Square for the faith's
15lst Semiannual General Con·
ference.
·'Some who are true and
faithful will perish, along with
the wicked and ungodly, in the
days ahead,·· said McConltie, a
member of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles. "But what
does it matter if we live or die
once we have found Christ and
be has seaJed us his? .. ·
trol System <AWACS) planes·to
Saudi Arabia.
In a statement released by his
Manhattan office Sunday, Nlxon
warned that "those who con·
sider themselves Israel's best
friends are In danger of becom·
ing their own worst enemies" in
o pposing the sale of tbe
sophisticated radar planes to the
Saudis.
Spokesmen for the Jewish or·
ganizations said Nixon's state·
ment was made at the Rea1an
administration's behest.
But the New York Times said
Nixon and a State Department
spokesman denied t.he former
president had been asked by the
administration to make the
statement.
"We know, the Saudis know,
and everyone in the Middle East
knows that if it were not for the .
intensity of opposition by Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin and parts of the American
J ewish community, the AWACS
sale would go through. This is a
cold fact that opponents or the
s ale , whatever their own
particular reasons, must take in·
to account. This fact will greaUy
alf ect the consequences if the
sale fails to go through,·· the
Nixon statement said.
Defeat of the sale, the former
President said, "will be seen as
a clear signal that America's
commitment to Israel's security
is open-ended, but our commit·
ment to the security of Israel's
neighbors is not."
.........
The two-day conference
featured 33 sermons by church
leaders on a variety of subjects.
But particular emphasis was
placed on Mormon belief that
the true gospel of Jesus Christ
was restored in 1830 through
church founder Joseph Smith,
and that revelation from God to
the church's prophets continues
with President Spencer W. Kim·
ball.
The former President also
warned that if the sale is turned
down, "everyone loses." Reagan
would be "embarrassed and un·
dermined," the Saudis would be
"humiliated," and Begin would
"be in the unenviable position of
having offended simultaneously
both his most important sup-
porter and his ric h est
neighbor," Nixon said.
TEARFUL MEMORY -Scott Summer, who serv~g as a
medic for the American military in the Vietna m War. holds
tattered fl ag that once flew over grave of his bes t friend
killed in the war . Summer was attending Sunda~ .. s Star
Spangled Salute lo Vietnam Veterans in '.'lashville
-
TAK£ Off FROM ORftNCif COUNTY, LAX,
OR ONTftRIO ftND SftV£ 40%..
Sanlose
For as little as $36. A1rCal
can Jet you to San Francisco. San Jose. or Oakland.
Naturally, there are some restrictions on our Low-Cal
fares~ But even if you can't
pick up a Low-cal fare. you
can take off and save with
our everyday low fare of $60
from LAX. Orange Countv.
or Ontano.
HNOOR
SACUMINTO. $58.
We also halie a Low·Cal fare of just S36 to Reno and
Sacramento~ Or: when you
have to leave in a hurry, it's
an affordable S60 to either
destination.
San francisco
There are no better deals
from Southern California to
these five destinations. Not
from any airport. Not on any
air1ine.
But AirCal gives you
more than just low fares We give you service in a very
special wav.
It starts with our people. All are trained to make Rying
a pleasure by doing more
for vou than the competition.
We offer one-stop check
in and seat selection before
vou board the plane. And we serve only the verv best
llQuors. Chivas. Jack Daniels, Beefeater and Smirnoff.
Oakland
MORE THAN 350 FLICHTS
PER WEEK ANO A CREAT
ON·TIME RECORD.
• AirCal has a great flight
selection Nearly 260 flights
a week from Southern Cal to tnel3ay Area:70 to Reno;
and 38 to Sacramento.
That means our schedule
should fit yours And we'll
keep you on schedule A1rCal
has one of the best on-time
performance records in the
industry. It all adds up to style
AirCal style. And that's the
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IROIL a~sr:~~=-dav a<1111nce resM«ianS required ~res ands~ suOJ«t to c1>1nge without notke. 'bin. our sf.Yll able~~CO SeMce not avail·
•
·" .. . . ..~
••I . ,.
..
I '·
...
'r
. ,
Lowe r gas price s
face 'turnaround'
LOS ANGELES CA P > -
Today's 1asollne prices are at a
polnt where they can fall
"virtually no lower," says oil
expert Dan Lundber1. and he
warns that it's a sure bet they'll
soon be on the rise.
With inflation accounted for,
asollne prices are actually
lower now than at this time last
year, according to the Lundberg
Letter, released Saturday. But
the publication added that "It's
bound to turn around."
"We're probably at that point
right now . . . delicately posed
where prices can fall virtually
no lower. They're at an irreduci·
ble minimum for dealers, job-
bers. wholesalers, and possibly
for refineries."
Gasoline prices have declined
nearly 4 cents a gallon since last
March, with the average pfice of
all grades at both full-and sell·
service stations standing at
133.92 cents a gallon.
Citizens assail
inte r es rates
OAKLAND <AP> -Scores of
Oakland residents, complaining
that high interest rates are "kill·
ing the American dream," have
lashed out at Federal Reserve
Board officials.
"With the interest rates, a
working man can't buy a home
or other major items," said God·
frey James or North Oakland.
"Millions and millions of peo-
ple like me are hurting and we
want something done about it,"
said James Vann, an architect.
A bout 150 people attended the
meeting Saturday. the fifth of 12
s uch sessions scheduled na·
tionally.
That approach goes beyond
current rules in Fresno but ls
similar to a method tried in San Jose to crack down on pros-
titutes, said Deputy City Al·
torney Jeff Hayden.
Pollce "would be allowed to
arrest them for every-
body knows tbey are doing,"
Hayden said. · 'Tbey are not
waving at cars because they are
friendly.''
Drag r a ce crash
kills Navy wi fe
SAN DIEGO CAP > -A
sailor's wife was killed and
three other women were
hospitalized in critical condition
after a drag race in which their
car crashed, police said.
That car and another were go-
ing faster than 90 mph when the
accident occurred Sunday in the
Kearny Mesa area of north-
central San Diego.
The dead woman, Josephine
Bryant. 27, was ejected from the
back seat. She died of a broken
neck. The other women, in the
same car, were taken to Sharp
Memorial Hospital.
Police said the other car was
driven by Thomas D. Lego, a
19-year-old s ailor.
Par k fees reduce
normal a ttenda nce
LOS ANGELES (AP> -At-
tendance was reported orr 50
percent at some Griffith Park
attractions over the first
weekend of ~ehicle entrance
rees, although other areas re-
ported normal attendance, of-'B k , ficials said. ec o n in g law Hardest hit appeared to be the
hi golf courses and Travel Town, ts prostitutes the train ride and travel exhibits
park. where officials noted a 50 FRESNO <AP> -Prostitutes percent decrease in attendance.
in Fresno soon may have to be But a spokesman said attend·
less obvious when they wave, ance at the Los Angeles zoo
whistle or wiggle at passersby to was "pretty close to normal."
attract attention. The park Thurs day began
The police department Tues· levying a vehicle entrance fee
day will pre.sent the city council -50 cents during the week and
a proposed ordinance which $1 on weekends -in order to
would allow arrests of known partially offset a $7.5 million cut
prostitutes "engaged in beckon· from the Recreation and Parks
_in_g_c_o_nd_u_c_t_.'_' --------Commission budget this year.
AP .........
HEARTWARMING-Country music star Tom T. Hall touched
the crowd during a concert in Bakersfield when he lifted
6-year -old Chad Douglas from his wheelchair. held him in
his arms and sang his hit song "I Love" to the youngster.
Chad has been wheelchair-ridden with numerous ailments
since birth.
'Aine rica for Jes u s'
rally draws 50,000
PASADENA (AP > -
Thousands of Christians of many
d e nominations and races
gathered this weekend to praise
God and pray for their coµntry
in a four-hour .. America for
Jesus" raliy at the Rose Bowl.
The rally, which attracted a
crowd or 50,000, is one or several
held in different American cities
as an outgrowth or the
"Washington for Jesus" rally in
April 1980.
Although the leaders said the
ceremony was n 't political,
prayers were orfered repeatedly
for President Reagan, Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr. and Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley.
"Our purpose, however. was
not intended to be political,"
said John Gimenez, pastor of
Rock Church in Virginia Beach,
Va.. and an organizer of the
Washington rally.
N eve rtheless, a giant
American flag was unrolled on
the fi eld and children from
dozens of churches sang "God
Bless America." When the song
e nded , red, white and blue
balloons were released.
0 ver a thousand people
walked out of the stands onto the
field at the end of the rally after
evangelist Arthur Blessit asked
them to "receive Christ as their
personal savior."
Cancer benefit
breaks record
LONG BEACH <AP' -A
unique cancer fund -
raiser bej(Wl six years ago ap-
pears to have broken its own re-
cord for money raised in a single
evening, according to the
event's organizers.
"As a rough estimate, it looka
like it'll be $360,000" -$20,000
more than last year -sald
B-1 bombe r
MX missi le
'Welcome~'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"It's
like Christmas around El Segun-
do today and even more so
around Palmdale," said Rep.
Robert K . ;)ornan as Southern
Ca lifornia 's aviation and
aerospace community reacted to
President Reagan's plan to build
100 B·l bombers and 100 MX
missiles.
Reagan 's d ecision was
welcome news within that com-
munity, which expected to reap
thousands of jobs and billions or
dollars as a result. And Doman,
R-Santa Monica, a longtime sup-
porter of the B· l , predicted
mo ney would trickle "r ight
down to the person selling
lunches at the gate."
''Model k:ts will appear in toy
s tores, and there'll be jobs
generated down even to that
level," he said.
With about half of the $20
billion contract for the B·l and a
herty chunk of MX contracts go-
ing to the El Segundo-based
Rockwell International Corp ..
Rockwell plans to increase its
work force from 2,350 employees
to 22,000 by 1985 or 1986. Just
over hall of the new workers will
be employed at plants in El
Segundo and Palmdale. north of
Los Angeles.
Close to 100 other Southern California firms making every-
thing from windshields to
steering and damping systems
will also benefit from the pro·
gram s.
Once the bomber program is
in full swing, for example, Stain·
less Steel Products Inc. of
Burbank expects about $3
million a year from manufactur-
ing engine air duct.s, s aid com-
pany president Arthur L. Moore.
Glenda Blackburn, aaalatant
director of development for the
Long Beach unit of the
American Cancer Society.
Ms. Blackburn said Sunday
ni1ht a final total probably
wouldn't be reached before
Tuesday.
The seventh annual auction
and dinner, held under a slant
white tent on the three-acre
estate of Daniel and Frani RJd-
der, began at 6 p.m. Saturday
and ran nine hours. Ridder is
vice president or Knight-Ridder
Publishing and is publisher or
the Long Beach Independent
Press· Telegram.
The event realized $34,000 in
1975, the year it was begun by
Mrs. Ridder and a few friends,
and has grown more than ten·
fold since.
Included in the fundraiser was
a silent auction, a dinner and a
live auction. The participants
were limited to 620 people
"because that's what fits under
the tent, .. Mrs . Ridder ex-
plained.
The money count was com-
plicated by the guests' use of
scr ip issued to them in return
for the checks -for up to $1,000
-that they remitted with their
invitations.
After $150 from each check is
put into the anti-cancer fund, the
guests use scrip to bid on more
than 1,000 items and services,
Mrs . Ridder said. Because ev-
erything is donated and all work
is voluntary, the cancer society
gets every dollar raised.
One of three amateur auc·
tioneers working Saturday night
was Jim Gray.
"We work cheap," he said
with a smile. "Our secret -
besides hard work -is that we
have fun knowing everyone and
getting them to bid against each
other."
Insurance man Rick Bryson
paid $2,500 for a Canadian red
fox coat for his wife, Nancy,
a fter the "referee" took bids
from the Brysons and another
couple.
"I feel a little weak," Bryson
confessed, but added that having
recovered from a cancer at the
base of his spine seven years
ago, the money was well spent.
,,
.,
'
,,
(
\
.,
·:
'•
) ' -
"I'm alive today because of 1•
the advances in research" he '
said. "I think of that when I
spend money here."
We're open in o lair •••
and celebrating everywhere!
.. I • ,,
Don't miss our grandest grand opening ever!
All 16 Holiday Spa Health Clubs are celebrating
the opening of our new super-club in Montclair.
But you've got to act now if you want to take advan-
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2 full years of slimming, trimming, shaping and
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Come into any Holiday Spa Health Club. Incred-
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N autilus; Paramount' and Unlversal~The finest
progressive physical conditioning equipment
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show you how. Plus Olympic-style swimming
and indoor jogging at most locations. Giant hot
hydro-massage whirlpools, steam rooms, saunas,
hourly aerobic dance exercise classes for women,
and much more. Holiday Spa Health Clubs. It's
the place your body has been looking for. And
there's no better time to get started than right
now, during our spectacular Montclair grand
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We're celebrating. Get 2 years for the price ofl at
the Holiday Spa Health Club nearest you. Call or
drop by for a free guest tour. But hurry! Do it today.
for Men and Women
LA COUNTY
~rritot/Lakewood 11881 Del Amo Blvd. In Cenitoe at Pioneer,
3 bloclte Eut of 6015 Freewll,)', <213) 924-1614
Chat.worthJNorthridse 9148 De Soto Ave. •t Nordhoff, (218) 882-6912
Endno 17081 Ventun Blvd., W•t ol Balboa, (213) 986-6330
Hotlywoocl 7080 Hollywood Blvd., Comer La Bru Ave.
et &f• Medical C.nt.er, <.213) 469-6307
Lon, Buch 4101 AtlanUt Blvd .. Com., of C&non, (213) 426-887•
'lbrrantt 20040 Hawthorne Blvd, al Del Amo Blvd.,
In U>. Beet Plua Cent.er, (213) MZ-3611
Wdt Lot Ansel• 1914 So, Bundy (near Olympic 81~.). (213)-820·71571
()RANGE COUHTY
B..ena Putl 610 8o. BMch Blvd. ~Ui ol Uncoln Ave., (714) 826-0381
Co-. .. ~ H.-. 81..S., (JWUnd Thrifty Dnac>. (714) 649-3368
().._.. • ...... C.,.f/ A-* l111
Mluk>n Vl~o 24401 Alicia Pkwy. •t San Die,o Fr.way, (714) 770-0822
Oranre 622 Eut K•t.ella Ave., Weet of'JU•tin Ave., (714) 639-2441
Wettmlnater 87157 Weetm!Nter Me. •t Ootden Weet, (714) 894-3387
San DI~ Announclna our neweet locaUon, 40l5 Cuilno Del
Rio Sout.h, <71•) 297-6062
INLAND LOCATIONS
Montclair AnnoWlCiDa our MW locaUon, 9386 Moo.tie~
at 1·10 in ~Montclair Ent.enainmenl P'u&. (714) 126-2411
llfftniiM 40lrO 1Mdi9on <•t ArHnit.on>. ('114> 187-1116
Sea lkrnarMno W NOYth H St. •l 3rd (oippaUtil C.nl etu
Mell>. {714) 88&-1381
•
Dally Piiat
MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1981 H /F
111111 ClliT CAVALCADE
AT YOUR SERVICE
82-3
86
.... -*" .......
Erma
teen-agers
Bombeck says
have hatched
some wild notions about
human birth. See Page B2 .
Model 12-meters maneuver for the start as they tack and jibe as c~mpetitively as the million dollar Twelves of America's Cup fame.
Skippers take to model sailing
R acing radio-controlled miniature 12 -meters latest yachting craze
By ALMON LOCKABEY Of ... .,...., Pl ... ,_
It's been said that the di(.
ference between men and boys
is the size and price of their
toys.
Model boats. for instance, are
not new. Boys have been sailing
them in the bathtub or in the
family swimming pool for years.
Latest craze a mong the yacht-
ing set is model 12-meter sailing
on lakes and ponds, and even in
the smooth waters of the bay.
It's not unusual to see grown
men walking along the shore
guiding their 6-foot "yachts" by
radio, similar to the radio-
controlled airplane mode ls.
By manipulating the servos on
the radio the "skippers'' can put
their craft through tack!i and
jibes -on the wind or off -
with the same skills as a skipper
anct crew of a real 12-meter in
America's Cup competition.
The fad has attracted some
oldtime yachtsmen who feel
they are getting a little too old to
handle the wheel and haul sheets
and halyards on the big yachts.
It is also fancied by a number of
s kipper s s till active in the
"sport" of yachting.
Regattas are held on a regular
basis. Recently a "national
championship" on the smooth
waters of the pond at the
William Mason Park in Irvine
attracted 18 model sailboat en-
thusiasts from as far away as
Okl ahoma.
One of the things that appeals
to the •·over the hill" sailors is
that a complete race over a
triangular course takes from
fi ve to 20 minutes to complete -
depending on the length of the
course. The contests, complete
with race committees. are sailed
under the same rules as regular
yacht racing.
A boat fouling another or a
m ark must make a 360-degree
turn before continuing in the
race.
Most of the races are run un-
der the sanction of the American
Mod el Yacht Association which
sets the rules for local organiza-
tions such as the highly active
Newport Beach 12-Meter As-
sociation.
Fred· Sc he nc k , n a tion al
secretary of the association,
estimates that there are about
51 4 model boats active in
various fleets throughout the
country.
So m e of the oth er local
yachtsmen who have taken up
the sport are Clary Staaf, Willis
Boyd , Swede Johnson, and Jeff
Farwell. Gene We lls, well
known yacht designe r from
Newport Beach, designed the
craft.
Sparks McClellan is the owner
of the plug from which the
fiber glass boats are produced
and is also race director for
local regattas.
The radio controls are sirrular
to the ones used in model
airplane flying and with a few
modifications can be made to
control the trim of sails and
change the course of the boats,
according to Johnson, a veteran
sailmaker and one of the early
devotees of the sport.
The boats are strictly one-
design -meaning that they
must be alike. The six-foot boat
complete with radio gea r
weighs 38 pounds , has an 84-inch
mast with stainless steel coated
fishing wire for rigging.
Several of the boats have tried
carbon-fiber masts, but these
were discouraged because of the
cost.
What is the cost of the adult
toys? Fully-rigged for sailing -
inc luding the r adio gear
prices range from about $550 to
$1 ,500 , depending on whether
one builds his own boat or buys
it from a commercial builder .
There are several p~ofessional
sailmakers, including Charles
Block of San Diego: John Amen,
Petaluma , and Skip Elliott,
Newport Beach. Some of the
owners build their own sails, in-
cluding Johnson. a former pro-
fessional sailmaker with Baxter
& Cicero.
Sails for local boats are made
fr om 2.2-ounce d ac r o n .
However, some of the boat
owne rs in Marblehead, Mass.
are experimenting with mylar
sails -the same materials used
on t he r eal 12·meters of
America's Cup fame.
In the national championships
at Mason Park, Johnson of the
Orange County rt eet was the
wi nner; second was Don
Prough, Argonaut Fleet, San
Diego: third was Ed Kimball,
Orange County Fleet ; fourth
was Bob Baker, He lms man
Fleet. Long Beach, and fifth was
Fred Schenck. Orange County
Fleet.
0
·D
I
,.
H I F Orengo Coast OAICY PILOT/Monday, October 5. 1981
I
DEAR PAT DUNN: I ordered a pair of
ltoea March lt from Spencer Glfti of AUu·
• le Cl&y, N.J. My baat& card accout WH
;a-laaried $11.15 ud tlae lhoH eveataaJJy ar·
· rlved. 'l"lley dldll'& fit so I retuDed ta.em by
a1ared maU. I reeelved a DOdce Aprll H HY·
~Pl my bank card accout would be credited,
~ut It wua't. I wrote about Um ud received
• "\aotber noUce lD July that my accout wo•ld
• be credl&ed. I'm still waltla& and hope you
CH help.
High doses of many chemicals are
poisonous. but they do not generally cause
tumors. There might be other effects of tox·
icity. such as loss or hair or weight, various
or gan malruncUons, or even death, but not
cancer. To learn more about thls subject, or·
der a free Department of Health and Human
Services booklet, "Everything Doesn't Cause
Cancer," by writing to Consumer lnforma·
ti on Center . Dept. 580J. Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
A. W ., Costa Mesa Ar ling ton burials A VS contacted Spencer Gifts and its
customer service department promises im·
mediate action on crediting your bank card
account. The spokeswoman for the mail·
· order firm noted that it usually takes at least
. .two months for a credit to show up on a bank
. statement alter it is issued by Spencer.
DEAR PAT DUNN: My husband ls a
veteran. He has told me-that when he dies be
wants lo be burled ln Arlington National
Cemetery. Are all veterans eligible for this?
P.R., Costa Mesa
·.·
:;,;Cancer causes listed
DEAR PAT DUNN: Sometimes It seems
like almost everything you eat, drink or
breathe causes cancer. Has it been de·
termlned exactly bow many agents do cause
~ancer, and whethe r high doses of any
This cemetery is under the Jurisdiction of
the Department of the Army. and burial is
limited to specific categories of military
personnel and veterans, except in the case of
cremated remains to be placed in the colum·
barium. For details, write to the Superinten·
de nt, Arlington National Cemetery. Ari·
ington. Va. 22211.
!i.l:bemlcal could cause this disease?
H.R., Costa Meaa
• :. Scientists have identified about 30 agents
" "that cause cancer in humans. Cancer doesn't
... ,usually appear until Civ~ to 40 years after ex·
. posure. Cancers of the liver, lung or bladder,
. )or example, may not show up until 30 years
•• 111rter a person is exposed to vinyl chloride,
. asbestos or benzidine. Most human cancers
~ .. probably are caused in part by the environ·
.. ,ment, from man.made and natural chemicals
found in t he a ir, water, food and the
,, 1'.:work place.
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•
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Doily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 . As
many letters as p<JSs1ble will be answered but phoned
mquines or letters not including the reader's full
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cannot be considered This column appears daily ez.
cept Sunday.~ ..
POLITICS OF POWER
Power of Secrecy ... William Colby
Former Director of the CIA
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 8 p .m .
Science Lecture Hall
Ticket information : 833-6379
Power of the Judiciary ... Shirley Hufstedler
..
Former Secretary of Education
Wed. Oct . 7, 8 p.m .
F110 M edical Sdence Lecture Hall
No admission charge. Call 833-6379
for complimentary tickets.
wer Among Nations ... Eldon Griffiths, M .P.
· Member of Parliament
Thurs., Oct. 8, 8 p.m.
Sc ience Lecture Hall
Ticket information: 833--6379
~------------.. ~ I ... ..,
I I
ISUNDAY, OCT. 111 I PREVIEW 11:00 A.M. -1:.00 P.M .• AUCTION STAATS AT 1:00 P.M. I
I NEWPORT BEACH MARRIOTT HOTEL 1 I 900 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH I
I OYER 300 ITEMS I
I WILL BE SOLD AT . I I NO MINIMUM ... NO RESERVE I
I :teE::a:: ::Y~:~e:::~d:ounted with DIAMONDS and I I other PRECIOUS GEMS. I
I • Antique GUNS, SWORDS AND MILITARY I I MEMORABILIA. I
I • African carvings and primitives. • BRONZES. I
I • Fine quality Sporting Arms such as: PARKER, I
I WINCHESTER, BROWNING, CHURCHILL and I
many others. I Various collectibles of almost ev~ry I I type will be sold WITHOUT RESERVE! I
I PREVIEW-11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Sun., Oct. 11th I
I SALE BEGINS AT 1 p.m., Sun., Oct. 11th •
L,.. ........ ......_ c• ...................... •1••• t 72·•tu I
P~ed tty LITTLI JOHH'S AMT19U I AlMS. IMC. ______________ ...
A lcohol
abuse
genetic?
LA JOLLA (AP) -
Children whose parents
are alcohollc have a four
limes greater chance of
becoming alcoholic than
children of non·alcoholic
couples. a UC San Diego
professor says.
"Studies done in the
United States and
Europe indicate
children of alcoholic
parents are a 20 percent
risk for alcoholism by
their early 30s. even if
they are separated from
their parents near
birth." said Dr. Marc
Sc bukit. "B y com .
pariso n . adopted
children of non-alcoholic
parents are only a 5 per·
cent alcoholism risk."
S pe a k i n g at an
alcoholism symposium
at Scripps Memorial
Hospital, Schukit said a
pilot study of 200 male
Resu lts of crime against the elderly
1. The most common response of el·
derly burglary v1ct1ms was a reluc·
tance to leave home. with a
. heightened fear' of remaining alone
1n 11 Some suHered acute anxiety
2.Elderly victims ol burglary. almost
without exception. displayed a long·
lasting fear lrom a sense ol tn·
vas1on and threat
3.Cnminal 1nvas1on ol the home. re·
gardless 01 outcome or loss. usually
assumed larger d1mens1ons tn the
v1ct1m's mind than a crime or acc1·
dent that occurred elsewhere
4.Nearly 40 per cent or the total
burglary and robbery v1ct1ms did not
go places nor engage in certain
ac11v11tes due to a rear of crime
5.Sltghlly over t 2 per cent moved
from their homes or sold business·
es c11tng the burglary and general
threat of cnme 1n the neighborhood
as the reasons
6.About 10 per cent ol robbery v1c11ms
changed their work schedules and
some abandoned employmcn1 as a
result of the robbery
UCSO stude nts since "----------------------------' 1978 does not (>rovide
conclusive evidence that
alcoholism is a genetic
SOURCE Senate Specia l Committee on Aging . based on a s urvey
of eJderly crime victims in Kansas City b~ Carl L Cunningham .
disease. However. it ,,....---------------------------.
calls for future studies.
Schuldt said chances a
man will become
alcoholic increases with
the numb er of close
r e lative s who are
alcoholic.
For complete ad copy and art services
advertisers all along the Orange Coast
rely on Daily Pilat
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MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1981
STOCKS
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
C6
C7
CB
Cardinals cut Cowboys
off at the pass . C2.
Rams still as unpredictable ~ as ever
Once again they play to the level of their competition in beating Cleveland , 27-16
B)' JOHN SEVANO
Of Hie OMly "'9e .....
The Rams have done it again. As hlstorv has
proved throughout the years, lhe Rams continue to
play to the level of their competition.
This time, Cleveland was their victim. And,
who could really blame the Browns for scratching
their heads in bewiderment? ·
Certainly the Rams' team that beat the Browns
here at Anaheim Stadium Sunday afternoon, 27-16,
wasn't the same team that struggled to a 2-2 rec·
ord the past month ag_ainst the likes or Houston,
New Orleans, Green Bay and Chicago -clubs
with a combined 7-13 mark.
But that's been the history of the Rams . Tradi-
tionally, they win when they hove to win.
"It's weird," says offensive tackle Doug
Fra nce. "We've always played just well enough to
win a nd I can't explain why.
"When our opposition is l·lS, then that's usual-
ly how we'll play. And then when we get a team
that's supposed to beat us, usually we win.
"Either we get motivated to play the good
teams, or being the underdog (the Rams were ac·
tually a 2'h·point favorite> brings out the best in us ."
The Rams were certainly at their best against
Cleveland ~nd, in a s trange sense, their
performance ts al~ost a backh~ded compliment
to the Browns as they reprisented the first
formidable foe the Rams faced in 1981.
Indeed, Coach Ray Malava~s squad was up
to the challenge, though. The offense, under the
s uperb direction of Pat Haden, was sharp. And the
defense was even sharper.
In five first-half possessions, when the Rams
built a 14·3 advantage, there were two touchdowns
a missed field goal by Frank Corral (of 22 yards):
a fumble by Wendell Tyler and. oh yes. another
drive stopped by the Browns' defense.
one TD> against the NFC's No. 1 ranked defense
against the pass.
And, by the time the Browns had regrouped, it
was too late. Tyler had a touchdown run of 2 yards
and caught a 1-yard TD pass; Mike Guman had
a 4-yard TD run: and Corral kicked field goals of
38 and 41 yards.
The Rams' defepse also limited the Browns to
318 total yards; 64 less than their seasonal
avera~e.
"Ray < Malavasi) has told us every day that I
can remember that we can beat any team in the
league and we believe that," allds Murphy. "We
seem to win when we have to win and that's all
that counts."
"Jt 's a sign of a team with a lot of talent,"
says defensive tackle Phil Murphy in trying to ex-
plain the Rams. "It's like going to college. If
you're not challenged then more than likely you'll
come home with Cs and Bs. But if you go to a
plate like Yale you're going to put out more.
The Rams, indeed, needed "to put out more"
to stop the potent passing game of Brian Sipe and
Co., ranked second behind San Diego in the AFC.
The Rams who, like the Browns, started the
season 0-2. needed a victory to keep pace with
Atlanta (3·1 l in the NFC's Western Division. The
Falcons play the Eagles in Philadelphia tonight.
Sipe, who came into the game having complet·
ed more than 56 percent of his passes, could
manage only 50 percent ( 14 of 28 for 250 yards and
And, it doesn't seem to be a coincidence that
the Rams are starting to put things together 'about
the same time Cleveland, Atlanta and Dallas ap-
(See RAMS, Page CZ>
Dally ~ ........... Illy ClllNI SUf"r
Baseball finally
• • gets mterestmg
It's Valenzuela vs. Ryan Tuesday
From AP dispatches
Forget about the records. the
split season. the strike and the
fact that two of baseball's best
teams won't even be there. It's
time for the game to get in
teresting again the playoffs
are here.
The best-of-five divisional
playoffs open Tuesday in the
home city of the second-half win-
ners. The Kansas City Royals
host the Oakland A's in the
American League West, while
the Houston Astros entertain the
Los Angeles Dodgers m the Na
tional League West.
The series in the East start
Wednesday with th e
Philadelphia Phillies traveling
to Montreal to play the Expos
and the New York Yankees
m eetin g th e Brewers at
Milwaukee.
The final three games of each
series will be played in the cities
of the first-half division winners
with the possible exception of
the Oakland-Kansas City series.
host games two through five .
But that possibility isn't mak-
ing Oakland Manager Billy
Mart in any happier.
·'The pennant should have
been ours five days ago and we
s hould have won it. We should
have had a bye, no question
about it," Martin said. "They're
not even a .500 club. It's a break
for them. I think it's a black eye
for baseball."
The Royals. who finished the
season with an overall record of
49·53. will statt right-hander
Dennis Leonard, 13-11 , against
t-he A's Mike Norris. 12·9.
THE BEST opening game
pitching matchup will probably
be in Houston , where the
Dodgers will send out rookie
sensation Fernando Valenzuela.
13-7, against Nolan Ryan, 11·5,
who no-hit the Dodgers oine
days ago.
.. I'm glad to see· us open al
home." Ryan said. "I look at it
as a plus. I fee1'We 're capable of
winning at home."
Valenzuela, the portly Mex·
ican left-hander who dropped his
last three decisions, said he
wasn't nervous about the game.
Ricky Feacher hauls in a 48-yard pass from Brian Sipe as Pat Thomas pursues. Thomas pulled a muscle on the play.
THE ROYALS finished the
second season just a half-game
ahead of Oakland and the A's
could repeat as division winners
today if Kansas City drops a
doubleheader to the Indians in
Cleveland. Oakland would then
"I'm going into the game with
a lot of confidence. I'm well
rested. I feel I'm still on top of
my game."
Statistics tell a story
Like Youngblood's sack which left Sipe in a daze
ByCURTSEEDEN
OfllleD ... y~St.ff
As mundane as they are, the defensive statistics
for the Rams' 27·16 victory over Cleveland Sunday
may hold the key to the game'seventual outcome.
For instance. the Browns' Robert L. Jackson, a
6-1, 230 pound hulk who literally knocked Wendell
Tyler out of the game with a bruising hit, deserves
special attention for his seven tackles and two as-
sists.
Less notable, perhaps, are Jim Youngblood's
stats. Officially, Youngblood was credited with just a
couple of tackles and one assisted tackle. And, oh
yes. one very big sack
FOR IT WAS YOUNGBLOOD who blindsided
Browns quarterback Brian Sipe on a blitz play late
in the third quarter with the Browns trailing, 14-10.
That hit, Sipe disclosed later, resulted in what
may or may not be a concussion which at times left
the eighth-year quarterback in a daze form uch of the
remainder of the contest.
"I got hit in the back of the bead. I've had
problems with this before," Sipe explained. ''It af·
feels my visual center."
Sipe was quick to point out that he's not a doctor
and he really can't diagnose the problem as a con-
cussion, but it was evident the Browns toned down
lheir oTrensive strategy following the devastating
hit.
·'It forced us to play a Little more conservative-
ly," Sipe admitted. "But that's not the story. The
story was the Rams' defense. They did a good jdb of
sending in guys to keep the pressure on me.··
STILL, IT SHOULD BE noted that on their next
series of downs. the Browns -then trailing 21·10
following Mike Guman's 4-yard touchdown run -
handed off three straight times to Mike Pruitt in fail-
ing lo_pick up a first down.
Actually, the Browns' troubles began earlier
\Vhen their game plan was thrown a curve by the
swarming Ram defense.
Sipe explained: "Our plan was to make suffi-
cient yardage so we wouldn't have to race their
nickel defense. Against Atlanta and Cincinnati <the
Browns' two victories) we managed to get plenty of
first downs on our firs~or second play." ~ Sipe said that by the time the Rams had opened a
27·10 lead on the strength of two Frank Corral field
goals, he was "gettlnafofgy.''
''They asked me if wanted to come out but I
really wanted to stay ln. But I don't want to inake
a big thing about thJs," Sipe continued. "l think
thls (blows to the head) happened about six timu
In '79."
SPEAK.ING OF JN.JURIES. Tyler's bas been
clasaified as a hamstring problem and hl1 status
next week in Atlanta ls uncertain.
f
Sunday's NFL scores
Rams 27, Cleveland 16
San Diego 24, Seattle 10
Buffalo 23, Baltimore 17
Minnesota 24, Chicago 21
St. Louis 2~11as 17
Green Bay 2 , Y Giants 14
New England , Kansas City 17
San Francisco 30, Washington 17
Houston 17, Cincinnati 10
Pittsburgh 20, New Orleans 6
Denver 17. Oakland 0
Tampa Bay 28, Detroit 10
NY Jets 28, Miami 28 (ot)
Tonight's Game
Atlanta at Phlladelphla (channel 7 at 6)
(NFL roundup, Page C2)
(NFL summaries, Page C4)
One thing that was certain, however, was Robert
Jackson's hit.
''I 'mjust an aggressive player,·· the soft-spoken
giant of a linebacker said. Asked if there was a pre-
vious altercation with Tyler to warrant the hit,
Jackson replied: "I made a tackle on him earlier. He
got up and pushed mea little but it didn't bother me.''
Jackson said the biggest problem the Browns'
defense faced was Cullen Bryant.
"We didn't expect the fullback <Bryant) to hurt
us the way he did. We thought going in the major con-
cern was going to be Tyler. But Bryant is big and
strong. and with that offensive line in front of him, be
proved hard to stop," Jackson added.
•'This was the first time we haven 'l gotten off on
the right foot," admitted Charles While. the former
Heisman Trophy winner from USC. "l was disap-
pointed I didn't have a good game (six carries, 12
yards), and I wasdisappointedtbatwedldn't win.
"BUT A Z-3 RECORD is no reason to panic. The
Central Division won't be decided until the last game
-not 'W December," White added.
l}rowns Coach Sam Rutigliano agreed with the
second-year tailback.
".We can resolve some of the problems we had to-
day and be ready for Pittsburgh (a big AFC Central
Conference confrontation next Sunday In
Pittsburgh). We just made a myriad of mistaku
that led to our self-deatrucUon.
"Andyouhavetoalvecredit totbe Rams and Pat
Haden. I thought they allowed Haden 1Ttat ftexiblll·
ty. They exploited his balance.
"As for us," Rullallano continued, ''we just
didn't bave a good 1ame and I don't have any ex·
cuses. And, when you a play a aood team like the
Rams, that just makes tblngs worse."
•
Rick11 Feachtr finds himstlf fn the grasp of .LeRoy Irvin.
The Astros suffered a serious
loss Friday night when pitcher
Don Sutton broke his kneecap in
a freak accident while attempt·
ing to bunt in a game at Los
Angeles.
"I DON'T FEEL there's any
more pressure on me because
we lost Sutton," said Ryan. "But
we did lose a quality pitcher, a
guy who's capable of beating the
Dodgers and knows more about
them than anybody else around
here.··
Philadelphia will send three-
tim e Cy Young award winner
St eve Carlton . 13-4, against
Steve Rogers. 12·8, in the NL
East opener as the Phillies go
after a second straight world
championship.
"We know whoever we played,
we'd get a good game," said
Phillies Manager Dallas Green.
"Montreal's pitching is ahead of
everybody else's. If you pin it
right down, probably ahead of
us."
The Expos, who lost the NL
East title on the last weekend in
each of the last two years. say
they're ready.
"WE'VE BEEN waiting for
this, and it's taken so long to get
here that I think we have the
momentum to go all the way,"
said Gary Carter, Montreal's
All-star catcher.
The biggest problem both the
Phillies and Expos may face is
the weather in Montreal. where
temperatures reached a high in
the low 50s Sunday.
HOLBERT WINS
AT RIVERSIDE
RIVERSIDE <AP) -Al
Holbert of Warrington, Pa., was
a surprise winner Sunday of the
Budweiser Grand Prix Can-Am
at Riverside International
Raceway with a record average
speed of 119.391 miles-per-hour.
Holbert took over the lead in
his CRC-1 CheVl'olet with four
laps to go from rookie driver
J elf Wood of Los Aneetes in a
LoJa Chevrolet, and held on to
win by 1.008 seconds.
Victory for Holbert, a repeal
winner at RJverside, WU lood
for $23,500 in prlze mone1 and a
boost ln his stock for \be driving
championship race on the
circuit.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981 ,,_ ______ _., ____________ _, ,.-.._....; ______________________________________________________________ ~
n
~,
Ill
~Madlock, Lansford
win batting titles
From AP Dl1patchea
Bill Mudlo<'k won his thlrd bat· •
ting title und Carney Lansford wen
his first Sunday as major-league
baseball closed its regular season -
except for the Kansas City Royals and
Cleveland Indians. that is.
The Royals must play a double-header in
Cleveland Monday afternoon to determine the
second-half winner in the American Learue
Wes t. But no players in·
volved in those games can af.
feel any of the individual bat·
ting and pitching races.
Pittsburgh's Madlock hit
.341, 16 points better than
Pe te Rose in the National
League batting race. He also
won the batting title in 1975
a nd '76 while w i th the
Chicago Cubs.
Madl1wk Mike Schmidt of the
Phillie!> led the NL in homers with 31, runs
balled in with 91 and runs scored with 78.
Rose haJ the most hits, 140; Bill Buckner of
the Cubs led in doubles with 35. and Craig
Reynolds of Houston and Gene Richards of San
Diego tied with 12 triples. .
Rookie Tim Raines of Montreal was tops m
stolen bases with 71
The top pitchers were Bruce Sutt~r ?f St:
Louis with 25 saves, Tom Seaver of Cmc1nnat1
with 14 wins. Nolan Ryan of Houston with a l.~9
earned run a verage, and Dodgers rookie
F'l•rnando Valenzuela with 180 strikeouts.
Lansford of the Boston Red Sox batted .336
to eapturc the AL hilling title by eight points
O\'er Kirk Gibson of Detroit.
Oakland's Rickey Henderson led the league
in run~ scored with 89.
Quote of the day
I leavywe1ght fighter James "Quick"
Tillis, talking about his first trip t o
Chi cago "( put m y s uitcase down and I
looked up at the Sears Tower and said,
·Chicago, I'm going to conquer you.' When
I looked down, m y suitcase was gone."
~From Page C 1
oyals must go to Cleveland
Dave Mdhy ta11ed Larry Gara •
for • Ue·bruldna home run In the
seventh lnnlna S unday. llftlng
Oaklaod to a 4·3 victory over Kansas
City and 1endln1 the Royals to Cleveland toda>
for a makeup double·he&der with the Indians.
The Cleveland trip, which the Royals had been
drc1tdln1. wiU determine whether the A 'a or
Royals are sccond-hulf champions and will also
have a bearing o n the
number of home games the
A '8 will have In the upcom·
Ina m lnl·serles . . . Kirk
Gibson blooped an RBI single
to score the winning run In
the ninth and Miit Wiicox
s catter e d e i ght h its as
Detroit s haded second-h alf
Eastern Division champion
Milwaukee, 3-2 .. The
McKo.11 Bre wers' foe in the fint
round, the New York Yankees, were also beaten
in their regular-season finale 5·2 by Baltimore.
Eddie Murray, who drove fu more than one·
fourth of the Orioles· runs during the second
half or the season, hit a two-run homer to lead
the charge ... Boston clos ed its season with a
6·2 win at Cleveland. as Dwight Evans homered
t wice and doubled against Indians' starter John
Denny , .. J erry Ha11'1ton c{lpped a tour·run
Chicago rally with a two-out RBI single in the
ninth as the White Sox closed out their season
with a bang 13-12 over Minnesota . . . Sixth·
inning home runs by Golden Wes t College
g raduate Terry Bulling and Tom Paciorek
broke up a scoreless duel and helped Seattle de·
feat Toronto, 2-0.
Mets fire Torre on last day
J oe Torre became the seventh Ii
major-league m anager to fall under
the ax this season when the New
York Me ts anno~nced S unday they
had fired Torre and his entire staff. Torre said
he was told of the decision by New York
Gen er al Manager Frank Cashen before the
Mets' final game Sunday. The Mets went out
and beat Montreal, 2·1 ... Lonnie Smith ex-
tended his hitting streak to 23
games with a third-inning
double and scored the win·
ning run on a wild pitch as
Philadelphia tuned up for the
playoffs with a 2-1 win over
the Chicago Cubs . . . Bob
S hirley and two relief
pitchers combined on a four·
hitter to pace St. Louis to a
4-0 win over Pittsburgh . . .
Torre Mario Soto hurled a one·
hiller-Chris Chambliss' leadoff single in the
second inning to lead Cincinnati to a 3-0 de·
~ision over Atlanta. . . Pinch-hitter Milt May
drove in the go-ahead run with a g roundout to
cap a three-run eighth inning rally th at lifted
San Francisco past San Diego, 4.3
!)RAM S DEFEAT CLEVELAND • • • ')f
h'pear on their schedule in s uc-
11 cessive weeks
vi 'I guess what we need is a
tchallenge," says defensive end ~:Cody Jones "When we play a
.,,weaker opponent we have a ten-
'(,:fen<.'y to relax. Wh en we play so-'3~eone good we want lo show
lhe m we're the baddes ...
The Ram~. too. seem to have a
-tremendous a\·ersion for playing
w e ll d1 s p 1tc distractions.
Whereas u team like Dallas wins
be ca use of their organization, the
Ra m s seem to have a l<nack for
winningdespite theirs. 1. • Already this season the Rams
• 1have had lo whether controversy
ISsurrounding Malavasi's job; an
, 'all edged power s truggle between
!ltG e n e r a I M a n a g e r D o n 21Kl osterm an and Malavasi ; a
!1Uarterback <.'ontroversy sur· ~'rounding lladcn. Dan Pas torini,
1 Jeff Rutledge (a nd the departed
!tl\fince Ferragamo l. and the un,
1 -tim ely and unpopular release of ''H
12-year veteran Fred Dryer.
Incredibly (or maybe it isn't in·
credible at all). the Rams' three·
game winning streak occurred
just about the same time all the
above forementioned reached its
peak.
"Cleveland is an outstanding
ball club, but we had to win, ..
adds cornerback Rod Perry
"And, we've always played bet·
ter when there's been adve rsity
a nd when our backs are against
the wall. It's been that w ay ever
s ince I've been here."
··We always s eem to put
ourselves in a position wher e we
have to win," admits Rich Saul,
who is in his 12th season with the
. Rams. "It's really nothing new lo
us. We've been there before and
we know what it takes to get t o the
playoffs.
''It boils down to either folding
or buckling u p a little tighter and
going after it.''
Going '"after it" is what the
Rams must continue to do now
. . and what the Browns have to
start doi ng.
"Maybe we're too s m art forthe
ave rage football mind." says.de-
fensive end Jack Youngblood of
the Rams' Jekyll -and-Hyde
personality. "Maybe we un-
derstand thegametoo well.
··You have to ha ve talent,
c haracter and the people to go out
and excel when they need to."
"lt really burns me to think we
lost those first two games," says
Haden. who seems to have finally
worked into a groove as he com-
pleted 21of31 passes for 205 yards
and one TD. "In my mind we
s hould be 5·0.''
In the Browns' minds they
might not agree they should be5-0
. . . but they certainly feel they
should be better than 2·3.
Maybe they just haven't
learned how to turn it on-and-off
yet like the Rams. or course, most teams don't
have that kind of ability.
BuJtfighter only muffed the kilt \
TlJUANA Allhouah h i• •
capework wus lmpre11lve, IS.year·
old David Renk of Houston aot a
trumpet warnln1 after ml11ln1 she sword ~
thrusu aaalnst bis second bull recently ·
A round of bootJ, catcalla and whiaUea from
the crowd of 7 ,000 c reeled the slim , youn1
American m atador.
"I felt confident about ~verythlng J dld elt·
ctipt for the kill,'' Renk aald later. "Well, the
11un will still come up tomorrow and I'll be
back.''
Rogers wins in sudden death
BUI Rogers <'urled In a 12-foot
birdie putt on the firs t playoff hole
Sunday to defeat Ben Crenshaw ln
sudden-death for the champions hip of the Texas
Open in San Antonio. Rogers had sunk a fou11
foot birdie putt on the 17th green to force the
playoff with the two T exans lying at 14-under·
par 266 after regulation , . The veteran LPGA
pair of Donna Caponi and Kathy Whitworth
went into sudden death to win their second con·
se cutive LPGA Team Championsh ip in
Portland, Or e Spain's Seve Balleste ros won
the Spamsh Open m Barcelona . Pro or Con,
a 14· to· 1 s hot, took the lead s hortly after the
start and went on to capture the Linda Vista
Handicap by one length before 37 ,620 at the Oak
Tree meeting at Santa Anita . . . Martina
Navratilova brought Tracy Austin's 28-match
winning streak to an abrupt halt and captured
the U.S. Women's Indoor Tennis Championship
crown with a 6 0, 6·2 triumph ... Rick Mears
inherited the lead j us t four laps Crom the finish
and fl ew to his Cifth fndy car victory of the
season in winning the Watkins Glen 200 ... Dar,
rel! Waltrip dominated the fi eld to win the Holly
Farms 400 Winston Cup Grand Nationa l r ace in
North Wilkesboro, N.C.
•
Te levision. radio
Following a re the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are:' 111 excellent; 1' ./worth
watching; ' / fair; ' fo rget it. e 6p.m.,Channe11 // / /
NFL FOOTBALL: Atlanta at Philadelphia. Announcers: Frank Gifford, Howard Cose II and
Fran Tarkenton.
The Eagles are still undefeated after turning a
one-point decision Into a rout by scoring 22 points In
the final 10 minutes against Washington last week.
The Falcons, meanwhile, were losing their first de-
cision to Cleveland but still lead the National Con-
ference West standinQs.
RADIO
Football -Atla nta at Philadelphia, KNX (1070).
TUESDAY'S TV-RADIO
Baseball -Oakland at Kansas City, 12: 10p.m.,
Channel 7, KNX radio <1070).
Top 10 remains
Edison property'
Things remain sta ble at the top in the Daily
Pilot's Orange County Top 10 r ankings -
Edison High's Chargers continue to make that
job easy following their 26th straight victory
and fourth this campaign.
In fact. the top four spots remain un·
changed Crom a week ago, but after that, it gets
sticky as Loar a, El Dorado and Ser vile exit the
Top l Ofollowing last week's losses.
Newcomers to the lis t include Pacifica
<No. 8) and Westmins ter tNo. 9), while El
Modenareturns(No.7). ~
T his week's big games a mong ranked
teams include No. l Edison against unranked
Mater Dei <2·2), No. 4 Estancia (4·0) against
No. IO Corona de l Mar (4-0 ). No. 6 Villa Park
< 4·0 and unscored upon l a nd unranked Foothill
I 3-1 l and Pacifica ( 4,0) against unranked El
Dorado t 2-2 >.
Pos. Team , record Next game
l. Edison (4·0> Mater Dei (2-2)
2. Esperanza t4·01 Kennedy (3·ll
3. Marina (4-0> Millikan (0·3)
4. Estancia l4·0 1 Coronade1Mar(4·0 l
5. Fountain Valley (J,l l Lakewood (0-3)
Cards shoot
•
Cowboys up
Late field goal does it
From AP Dlapatcbes
ST. LOUIS -Neil O'Oonoahue kicked a 37-yard
field goal with 23 seconds left, giving the St. LouJs
Cardinals a 20-17 National Football Leoeue upset
over the Dallas Cowboys Sunday.
O'Oonoghue's kick climaxed a 63-yard St . Louis
drive in the game's closing minutes and knocked
Dallas, 4·1, from the ranks of the league's unbeaten
teams. The Cardinals, who a re 2·3, had lost six
straight lo the Cowboys.
Quarter back Jim Hart threw passes of 20 yards
to Doug Marsh and 19 to Roy Green lo spur the win·
ning drive after t he Cowboys' Danny White punted
out o r bounds at the St. Louis 7.
Just prior to O'Donoghue's decisive kick, Ottis
Anderson scampered 9 yards to the Cowboys' 20.
Jn other action Sunday ·
Broncos 17 , R aid e rs 0
OAKLAND Denver safety Steve Foley
killed Oakland's only s erious touchdown threat
with a fumble recovery, and the Broncos handed
the Super Bowl cha mpions a second consecutive
shutout loss by beating the Raiders 17·0.
Denver. the top-rated defensive team in the
National Footba ll League, held the Oakland of·
fense to less t han 200 yards, sacked Jim Plunkett
three times and intercepted him once. The Raiders
went to young quarterback Marc Wilson in the
fourth period a nd he was promptly intercepted.
The victory gave Denver a 4-l record. The
Raiders, who went 15 years without being shut out
before losing to Detroit 16·0 last week, dropped to
2-3.
Chargers 24, Seahawks 10
SAN DI EGO Quarterback Dan Fouts tossed
three touchdown passes and broke his club record
with 30 completions, propelling San Diego to a
24-10 victory over the Seattle Seattawks.
The victory, San Diego's fourth in five games.
enabled the Chargers to stay in a first-place tie
with Denver in the AFC West. Seattle, winless in
eight meetings with San Diego, fell to 1·4.
Fouts, who atte mpted 41 passes. had
touc hdown tosses of 12 and 11 yards lo Ch arlie
Joiner and a 9-yarde r lo light end Kellen Winslow.
He finished with 302 yards passing, none longer
than 15 yards.
P a triots 33, Chiefs 17
FOXBORO, Mass. -Matt Cavanaugh jumped
on two Kansas City mistakes to throw for one
touc hdown and run for another as New England
dumped the Chiefs 33-17 for their rirst victory of
the season.
The Patriots, 1·4, grabbed a 14·7 halftime lead
thanks to their first two interceptions of the year.
After Mike Ha wkins picked off former San
Clemente High standout Bill Kenney's first pass.
Cavanaugh tossed a 13-year scoring pass to Don
Hassel beck.
The Patriots' quarterback followed up Mark
Buben·s 47-yard interception return to score on an
8-ya rd bootleg with 6:48 lefl in the half.
Jets 28, Dolphins 28 (OT)
MIAMI -New York's Pat Leahy missed a
48-yard field goal attempt on the final play of over·
tim e as the Jets and Miami had to settle for a 28-28
lie.
Richard Todd's fourth touchdown pass of the
game, a 36-yard pass play to wide receiver Bobby
Jones with 1:09 rem aining in regulation play,
ena bled the J ets to cat ch up with the Dolphins and
send ttie game into the extra period.
The J ets, winne rs of six straight games pre-
viously over the Dolphins, rallied in the final
quarter on an eight-play, 76-yard tying m arch,
highlighted by Todd completions of 13 and 6 yards
lo Wes ley Walker who earlier caught two
touchdown passes.
~1Astros look
:-::for sweep
6. Villa Park 14-0l Foothill (3·1 l .l~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~=7=.=E=l=M=od~en=a=1=2=.2='~~~~=S=an=t=a=A=n=a=<3=·=ll~~~B-u_c_c_a_n_e~e-r~s=--2-8_._L_io~n-s~1-0.,--,.....,...~-:--:-.,--,.--r-8. Pacifica (4-0 > El Dorado (2·21 TAMPA, Fla. -Doug Williams capped four
9. Westminster (3-U LB Wilson <1·2 ) lightning-quick scoring drives with touchdown
10. Coronade l Mar l4·0> Estancia (4-0) <See PRO, Page C3)
************ AnlWll' To LUI Week'• Puzzle t home ACROS6
1,5 Shown, star LB 33 Falc.,,s' OB
LOS ANGELES <APl ~~1~~,~~ 34 =~Claudie -
-When the National g Kind of pus 35 Glanta' oe League West divisional 14 _Mias MMtlhem
series begi ns Tuesday 15 Box-office draw 39 Seehntta' T HIMe
night in Houston, the 17 Helamen OB 37 TM-c.tdlnet.
Astros race the unenvia· Klnftlek (ab.)
ble task of defeating 18 Hlgtt note 31 ....,. oC ~ 9ell
b o t h F' e r n a n d 0 19 Biiia' C Grant 4'1 ~· OfO.
Vale nzue la and J erry 21 S100blll <M H•ll9f Arimer
R h 22 Portal Wot<*C'*ilk:z euss, t c Los Angeles 24 Hall _ Fame 48 Hall of Fem9f
D o d g e r s · a c e I e ft · 26 Redskin•' CB Par1(9f
handers. Parrish 49 Lavlth party 54 Buccaneer's OT
For if Houston Cai ls to 29 Hall of Famer 51 Amot"acounterpart Randy -
.sweep the Cir s t two "Night Train" -S3 Bald (pref.) 58 Packen' LB Ed -
58 Hall of Fame< Neal
50 With 47 Down
Falcons' aw RB
g a m e s i n t h e ======== ·------· ll:~"C"....,~""'C~'lr-trr"'I Astrodome, they would 1
have to win at least two IP!!-.--+--+--+--t
o ( l hr e e i n Dodge r DOWN
Stadium to advance to 1 Beera· RB Ron _
he NL champions hip 2 Notion
cries. And the As tros 3 Lineman (ab.)
ave won but two of 4 Linemen (ab.)
heir last 13 games in 5 Vlklnga• LB Matt -
os Ange les. including e Oilefa' RB
u n d a y ' s r e g u I a r Campbell
e a s o n e n d 1 n g s . 3 7 Lineman (ab.)
riumph. 8 Flag ottlcef (ab.) 9 cares1na11· LB "I'd say we have to Wiiiame
in the m both." said 10 Hall of Famef Lary
ouston Ma nager Bill ,, Redaklna' CB
:Virdon or the two games La~nd«
n the Astrodome . '"It's 13 Packer1' CB Ma111-
o u g h · p I a y i n g 11 Pointe for • aafety
o m eplace where you 20 Behold!
on't play well, especial-22 Redlklna' Butz· and Olanta' y when you have three J.,,n1nga
a m es the re." 23 Smelter Input
• •
NFL standings • • • • • • • NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Western Division
W L T PF PA Pct.
Atlanta 3 1 O 109 62 .750
Rams 3 2 O 123 96 .600
San Francisco 3 2 0 113 106 .600
New Orleans 1 4 0 50 105 .200
Eastern Division
Philadelphia 4 O O 93 40 1.000
Dallas 4 1 O 126 78 .800
St. Louis 2 3 O 94 117 .400
NY Giants 2 3 0 71 83 .400
Was hington 0 S O 77 149 .000
Central Division
Minnesota 3 2 0 103 115 .600
Tampa Bay 3 2 O 96 80 .600
Detroit 2 3 o 97 99 .400
Green Bay 2 3 O 96 ll9 .400
Chicago 1 4 O 82 109 .200
AMERICAN CONFER ENCE
Western Division
W L T PF PA Pct. • .. San Diego
Denver
Ka nsas City
Oakland
Seattle
4 1 0 162 120 .800
4 1 0 106 54 .800
3 2 0 124 132 .600
2 3 0 63 62 .400
.. .. • • • 1 4 0 68 101 .200
Eastern Division
Miami 4 O 1 125 83
Buffalo 3 2 O 127 67
NY Jets l 3 1 101 14.5
New England 1 4 0 106 121
Baltimore 1 4 O 87 145
Central Division
Pittsburgh 3 2 0 128 104
Cincinnati 3 2 O 112 112
Houston 3 2 0 80 82
Cleveland 2 3 O 81 114
.. .900 •
,600 •
.300 1.
.200 •
.200 •
.600
.600
.600
.400
• .. • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • ..
• JOHNSON & SON :
Presents ... • • • .. • • • ,. • • • • • • ., ....... 'Gnel& ... •
NR.'s
Pick of
The Week
ft SUNDAY•
A•ma
ov.r
Cleveland
Denver
..
lt • • .. • • • • .. • • over •
O•kland •
Detroit •
over !
T•mp• Bay ,._
ft MONDAY• ,.. * * * * * * * * * * * * * • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 11 * * * * * * * * * * A11•nte •
The Astros' last win in 2& Browne' CB
os Angeles befor e Sun-J~on -
ay was their sin1le-28 Sotlo ~.one•
ame playoff for the NL 21 Greak tatter est Utle In J980, 28 9.....,.. ce Blount
! Pete's Pick See The Phf.:::rphl• : llllr+--I~--: at Joh,nson & Son E' v:c'rr'NG :
45 ~phtne·TI! ., ..... oe"" : Jolnison & "on A 1
• • 11 : ·'II they're concerne<J, 30 WHHam -Mary.
at's 1ood for us," said 31 Nalttw"a t.IQ410f\Q
o s A n i e I es fl r s t 32 hf'"* PCJettQally
aaeman Steve Garvey. 34 Imperfection
31 The -Ram1 (ab.)
Nolan Ryen, 11·5, will 39 Hall of F*'-
ppose Valeniuela. 13-7. Aaifmond-
Tuesday pigbt. 40 Outr.Csw-tJ
" .
:; E:· : p. : 2'~~=~=;'!.I. * ••• '82' • * ~
.. ~.:"::::~:: The-09ntl(abJ ! ;::.~= AT JlllNSON & Sii :
~••)*****************'******************• •••••••~I
~ .
I
i
~ . , '.
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Champion·
• 10 two ·1
.sports
NEW YORK (APl II betne
a world c hampion Is unique.
then where does that place
Sheila Young Ochowlc:t?
The only athlete ever to
become a world champion in two
sports, Shella Young Ochowicz
was n a med today to the
Women's Sports Foundation
Hall of Fame.
Others Inducted at ceremonies
here today were golfers GleMa
Collett Vare and Mickey Wright,
tennis player Chris Evert Lloyd,
figure skater Peggy Fleming
and track star Wyomia Tus.
A native of Birmingham,
Mich .• Young almost made the
1968 U.S. Olympic speed skating
team. Then, in 1970, she cap-
tured the U.S. speed skating
ch ampionships, a feat s h e
duplicated in 1971.
BUT IT WAS 1973 when she
bur's t onto the international
scene. After winning the 500-,
1,000· and 3,000·meter races in
the U.S. speed skating cham-
pionships, she set a world record
in the 500 meters with a clocking
of 41.8 seconds.
Young, then 22 years old. went
on to capture the women's title
at the world sprint speed skating
championships in Oslo, Norway,
a nd also captured the world
cycling championship.
"They a r e two different
s ports, but you use basically the
same muscles, just in different
ways," she said , explaining how
a world-class athlete in speed
s kating can also be a world-class
athlete in cycling. "I first began
cycling in orde r to stay in shape
for speed skating."
The dual life continued for
Young two years later as she
won the women's title at the
world speed s k a ting cham-
pionships at Goteborg, Sweden,
and lowered her own world rec-
ord to 40.91 in the 500 meters in
Switzerland.
At the Winter Olympic Games
in Innsbruck. Austria, in 1976,
Young took the gold in the 500
meters in an Olympic record
42. 76 seconds. the silver in the
1,500 meters and a bronze in the
1,000 meters. becoming the first
American in the history of the
Winter Olympics to bring home
three medals.
"I GOT ONE of each," she
said, laughing. "It's a nice set."
Later in 1976, she lowered her
own world record in the 500
meters to 40.68 seconds , cap-
tured the world speed skating
championship and world sprint
speed skating title. She finished
the year in a blaze or glory. win·
ning the world sprint cycling
championships .
· Then she began a third phase
of her life. She married cyclist
Jim Ochowicz.
R eti rin g fr o m active
p a rticipation, Young had a
baby, became a member of the
U.S. International Speed Skating
Association board of directors.
was named an athlete represen·
tative of the U.S. Olympic Com-
mittee and joined ABC-TV as a
commentator.
Newport
volleyball
team set
Final selections of players for
the Newport Volleyball Club
girls team have been made with
21 players selected for the two
teams.
Included on the 15-and-under
squad are : Andrea Reddick
<Corona del Mar ); Cammie
Doder (Corona del Mar); Dana
Wheeler <Harbor Day School>;
Annette Juptner (Laguna
Beach); Dar cy Pankhard <Dana
Hills>; Stephani e Noonan
<Mater Del).
Shellie Walsch (Ensign>; Julie
Evans CHarbor Day School):
Anne J av age (Estancia); Chris·
ty Svalstad <Fountai.n Valley);
Lindsey Alstrum <University).
On the 13-and-under team are:
J ennife r Noonan <Our Lady
Queen or Angels ): Lara Asper,
Gina Giangregorio and Laura
Power <Ensign); Ann Bond.
Sandy Hugill and Janine
Jurg<'nson (Lincoln); and Jenny
Evans (Newport Elementary):
Loren Newman and Mindee
Adams (Lakeside) .
Jack Houston is coach of the
two teams and invites others
who might not have had an op-
portunity to try out for the two
teams to contact the club at
494-6302.
UCI rolls past
USC poloisl.8
UC Irvine showed a balanced
scorina attack and abul out USC
durlng the middle quarters and
went on to poet a 14-t vlctoey
over the Trojans Sunday ln
water polo action at NeWpOrt
Harbor Hiab.
John Varaaa and Dl1c Riley
. Ii
•I . ..
:I . ~
,,
..
.. .J
.. . .
:·
...
' ..
. I
'I
•l
..
: • •
'•
.: ,
rl
I ..
J
•I
~ ,1
I
scored three 1oals apiece to ...
ap1rk the Antealtn wbo are
now &.3 ovenlJ. UCI wtU be in
.. ...
Palo Alto to race Stanford md rt Santa Clara this weekend. ·:•
-----------------
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~ .
Airline's idea
to beat costs
I don't know 1f American Atrlines 1s bettlni on -
or against inflation, but Its new air·pass proar"m
reminds roe pf lh"·· quagmire Westinghouse found
itself an afte r ii auaranteed lo deliver uranium at a
fixed µrice.
Tht• disastrous Westinghouse promise w:as made
10 lhc I~ wht•n the company was 1.ry1ng l-0 sell
nuclear re~ctor~ ll agreed, a s part of the deal, to
s uµpl.> uranium al $9 50 u pound. the current price In
1965 By l975, when the price had soared lo S40 a
pound. Westln~house wus an serious trouble. It had to
rent!Re on al!> cont racts a nd then settle a long serle!\ of
laws uits .
Turning lo the ~ airllnt• business, let's i ·
ask this question Do ,' o
you lhink air rares ~'.
will c1intinue lo go up A "' :t_ t he wuy they have .1111--1...;:;...i_-., _____ _
been" IC so.,1you can Ml(JOI IDllOWIJZ ma ke a dea l with
Americ<tn Similar to
the deal lht· utiht1e~ made with Westanghou!.e, lock
mg in fart•'> ill the prices now prevailing
American's new program gives customers a
chance Lo buy passes e nl.Jlhng them lo t ravel on
Amen cun Airlines for a specific number of miles
over a specific number or years . In effect, you pay in
advance and you luck out if prices go up. For ex·
a mple , you can buy t hl' following ·
l. .A fi ve-yea•· pass good for 25,000 miles each
ye<ir (1f you don't use up all your miles in one year.
you can c:arry lttt·m over 1 The price: SJ9,900
2. A JO.year pass good for 25.000 miles each year.
The prtt•e S39,500
3. A 15 year pass good ror 25.000 miles each year.
The price $58,900.
If you rt y a lot. as some business people do, this
could be the bargain or the century. You could buy a
IS-year pass and stall be using it to fly 25.000 miles in
1995. no matter what the prices are then If American
sells a great num ber or these passes to corporate
tus~oml.'rs and 1f fares then do escalate sharply. the
airline \\Ill be in Westing house's position ldehverang
today's produc-t al yesterday's prices I. But at least it
will be getting its mont.-y up front.
_ On the other hand, let's imagine the impossible :
prices come down s harply In that case. American
makes out like a bandit 1l has already sold its seats
a t earltcr and higher prices The loser here 1s the
customer who bought the pass
There arc other wrinkles to the new American
Airlines program Insurance actuaries, who fi gure
out how long people are expected to live. have been
al work advising American, a nd so the airline is of·
frnng :-.pee.al passes for e lderly people.
If you a re 52 or older , you can buy a lifetime
pass. entitling you tu fly 25.000 miles a year, ror
S66,000 Jr you are 62 or older, you can buy a lifetime
pas~. entitling you to fly 12,500 miles a year, for
Sl5,500 And 1r you are 65 or older. you can buy a five
year pass for $8,000
fo'inally, there's the big one an unlimited lifetime
J>ll:.s, cnlllling you to fl y as much as you want any
lime .~·ou want for the rest of your hfe. The price for
lh1s ba by S250,000 Think of it, for a quarter of a
m1l11on doll•irs you can buy a pass that gets you on
an~ American Airlines rlt ght anywhere at any time
for the rest of your life First class or coach,
\\hatevt:r If you have another 60 years to live, that
works out to less than $4.200 a year. What an infla·
two beater '
It has been tough for airlines to come up with
s~hcmes lhal a re not quickly copied . When som e car·
ners began 1:-.suing discount coupons. other a irlines
chimed an and said they would accept them When
Am en c an introduced the Super Saver fares in 1977.
they were quic kly copied And earlier this year when
American introduced its frequent-flier program. giv·
1ng bonust'" ln cust om l'rS \\ho flew Ame rican
regular!) that 11ka \\as 1mmedwtely copied
_ But this lime American appears to have beaten
its competitors to the punch and there's no coun·
tcq~unch "lot yet. anyway The others are still trying
to figure• •l nut Is American crazv -or slv la ke a fox'' · ~
In the firs t few da~ s after the announcement
Am erican got a lot of inquiries and three orders ror
passc.>s. One was for the $66,000 lifetime pass for peo-
p~e 52 and over,. but David Frailey, public relations
director of American. said he didn't know if that real·
ly counkd because 1t was bought by the head of
Am e rican's new ad vertising agency , Bozell &
Jacobs
Gold me~als quotations
wld
By The Associated Press
Selected world gold prices today·
London: morning fixing $440.75. up$5.75.
London: afternoon filcang $441 25. up $6.25.
Paris : a fternoon fixing
Frankfurt: $440 01. up S3.99
Zurich: late fixing $441 00. up $6 00; $444.00 asked.
Handy & Harman: only daily quote $441.25, ui)l6 25.
F.ogelhard: only daily quote $441.25, up $6.25.
Engelhard: only dail y quote fabricated $463.31, up
$6.56.
Gold coins
NEW YOKK CA Pl Prices late Friday of gold coins
compared w1th T hursday·s price. '
Krugerrand, 1 troy oz .. $461 oo. up $7.25.
Maple leaf, 1 troy oz .. $461.00, up $7.25.
Mexican 50 peso, 1.2 troy oz., $557.00, off $1.00.
Austrian 100 crown, .9802 troy o:z., $436.00, UI) $7,00.
Source. Desk Perera
Mekds
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrous metal prices to-
day :
Copper 81~·86 cents a Pound, U.S. destinations.
Lead 3S 42 cents a pound.
ZIM 4814 cenLs • pound, delivered.
Tln $7.9370 Me~Js Week composite lb.
Ala.ml_num 76-80 cents a pound, N. Y .
Mercury $432.00 per nuk .
Pl1Unum $404.00 troy oz., N. Y.
SiWer
Handy &c llarmllJl. •·• per tro7 ouace.
4
..
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 5, 1981
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Dow Jones Final
Off 0.86 .
Closlng 859.87
~
Airline's idea
to beat costs
I d~n't kn~w if American Airlines 1s belling on -
or a~a1nst mflauon, but its new air-pass program
remm~s me of the quagmire Westinghouse found
itself in after 1t g uuranteed to deliver uranium al a
fixed price.
. The disastrous Wt:stinghouse pronuse was made
m the 1960s when the company was trying lo sell
nuclear rea~tors . It agreed, as part of the deal, lo
supply uranium at S9.50 a pound, the current price in
1005. By 1975. when the price had soared to $40 a
pound. Westinghouse was in serious trouble. It had to
renege on its contracts and then settle a long series of
laws uits.
a irltne business. let's •.-Turning t o the ~
a s k this question . Do \' o
you think air fares ~.'
will continue to go up .. , 'i, lhe way they have ,;11 __ .. _..;.. .. _.,. _____ _
been" If so, you can MllTOI MlllDWITZ make a d eal with
Ame rican similar to
~he deal the ut1lil1es made with Westinghouse. lock·
1ng in fore!.> at lhc pnc:cs now prevailing.
American's new program gives customers a
chance to buy passes entitling the m to travel on
American Airlines for a spet'ific number of miles
over a s1>eeifi c number of years. ln effect. you pay in
advance and you luck out if prices go up. For ex·
ample. you can buy the following·
I l\ fi ve-year pass good for 25,000 miles each
year <if you don·1 use up all your miles rn one year ,
) ou l'an ('Urry them oven. The price S19.900
2 /\ 10-year pass ~ood for 25,000 miles each year .
The price $39,500
3. A 15-year pass good for 25.000 miles each year .
The price $58,900
I ( you fly a lot, as some business people do. this
could be the bargain of the century You could buy a
IS year pass and s till be using it to fly 25,000 miles in
1995, no matter what the pricel> are then. lf American
sells a great number or these passes to corporate
c~stomer~ and 1( fan•s then do escalate s ha rply, the
airline will be in Westinghouse's pos ition <deliver ing
today's product al yesterday's prices> But at least it
will be getting its money up front
On the othe r hand, let's imagine the impossible:
prices come down s ha rply In that case, American
makes out like a bandit -it has already s old its seats
at earlier and hi~her prices. The loser here is the
customer who bought the pass
There are other wrinkles to the new Amencan
Airlines program Ins urance actuaries. who figure
out how long people are expected lo live, have been
at work advising American, and so the a irline is of-
fering special passes for elderly people
If you are 52 or older, you can buy a lifetime
pass. entitling you to fl y 25.000 miles a year, for
S66.000 If you are 62 or older . you can buy a lifetime
pass, enhtJir:ig you lo fl y 12,500 miles a year, for
$15,500. And 1f you are 65 or older, you can buy a five.
year pass for $8.000
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
N•me I Pleyboy En 2 S.mbOs Ast
l S..nElec .• MoDll Ho,,...
S WullNetl • 6 NVF Co 1 GTFI pl8 I Flt p.,,n• t LIL C() pfl(
10 Meys JW II OUtsSvc• It Alo .. ndrt 13 Oreyfu1Cp s 14 OonL.ul Jen IS POlerold l~ ~';.~~l~dln
GOLD COINS
'.
Ptl Up 1>8.9 Up 26 9 Up 11 9 Up IS 9 Up U 3
Up ll • Up I) 0 Up 12.1 Uo 11 I Up 11 h
Up II • Up 10 I Up 10 S Up 10 3
Up 100 Up t S
Pel
Off U 5 Off 14 l Off 10.0
0 11 • ' Oft •• 011 I 3 Off Is 011 I . Oft • I 0 11 • I
0 11 • • Off 6 A
Oii '·' Off '0 011 s 8 011 S.I Off S.7
HEW YOltlC CAPI -Prices l•lt l"rldAly of
llttkl Collll. c~ wltll T hUncNY't prl(t
It~, I lroyor ..... 1.00, up$7,H,
M•llte lllM, 11rov 01,, Mtl.00, up $7.JS.
M .. ktll JO pe..O, I.I troy 01 .. SSS7 .00, oft '1,00,
A~ 100 C'-11, .t902 troy ttt., ~.00,
1111'7.00.
Souru.o....,..,....
NEW YOAll \llPI -S•i.o noon "''°" eno ,,.. c;tw'9 Of ,,... t-" mo.I •C1••• Amenc1n ~ b.chingl IM 'uel ltedlnQ n lflO"ll llf II mor9 ln.n
SomeP1rl ' 191 ol()() 1' 1 0.l•prOd 1&S 000 11'• GullC•n O IJO 300 11 , , t
Weng e •J0.700 Jt .. R•nt1e•Oll llS.SOO ' , R10Algom O M 100 7t"o HouO!lTr 8A,SOO 10
Oor<llSIGH ll,100 18', '• Pelrol l."W 72,800 II', • " C,,_'l'P Ho 11, IOO 1',
METALS c._..11~ cents• POUnO, u s 0.111,... llOllS
LtM-..2ctnUe-.no
ZlllC 4'14 cenu •pound, dtllvtr.O
Tin $7.mOMeltlS Wffl! <omPOtll• 11).
Ahlm I-. 16«1 cent>• pound, N 'f .
Mtrc11ry M32 .00 per fluk.
"'•ti~ M0o 00 lroy 01.. N V
SILVER
Handy lo H•rm~. it SOO per troy ounce
GOLD QUOTATIONS
._._, monil11t1fl•l110'440 7S, upU.7S-
L•-: •ft.,_ fl•lllO '-Ml.U, up Sol.U .
Fr•1141""1: $440.01, up '3 "· Z11rlcll: l•I• fl•lng $.'41,00, UP $6.00;
$.4'4.00 •sk..S
H•11lly & "•rm•"' only delly qwol•
"''·"· up$6 u a...-: on•v ci.11~ quoit M41 ts, ,... "'·" a,..-.-· <W'r Gelly quOI• lebtlc•led
$.06331,yp .. St
SYMBOLS
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